Jenny, thank you. That is the exact spot. Makes you wonder what happened to the poor man (and his co-pilot and passengers) on that day. I see quite a few white specs on that photo (153508 / 148503 /144509 /138502 /136521 and maybe 139520). Is it just my imagination? Are these really just specs? They would all be beyond the official map with the plot of glider landing. At 145513 I had previously detected the grave of Bdr Yates of 4 Airlanding AT Bty.
Yes I think you're correct and these are all gliders. They're all far away from the LZs, probably due to the heavy smoke haze. Do you have the graves concentration report concerning Yates? Is he alone or were others buried at the same spot? Jenny
He was alone... I am just checking the NCAP collection for the area ... so far, I am having difficulties to find any gliders there. They are all clearly visible on the proper LZs but in this area I cannot make out anything. I will try some more but I am beginning to have my doubts...
I just looked up aerial pictures from the 25th from that particular spot, might it be that he just got buried there but crashed somewhere else? The only aircraft that crash landed in that grid was the hamilcar with the tank tracks coming out of its front I showed earlier. Although it must have been under heavy fire since you can see a lot of trenches around it, they might have been lucky and got the vehicle out of it fairly quickly.
Hi, The glider shown in Moe's aerial could be a Horsa? Horsa wings taper a little more than the Hamilcar's and are more rounded on the end. As well there appears to be a length of fuselage to front of wings or am I seeing things? Hamilcar wings are set well forward on fuselage. However, the blackness of the wings, rear fuselage and tail may indicate the glider was set ablaze. In which case speculation about wing shape would be meaningless. If lines seen to front of glider are actually tracks then it is more likely that each line is a set of tracks. For comparison I'll add a low level Normandy aerial showing a Hamilcar with Horsas nearby. Regards ... Edit - Second thoughts
I have strong suspicion that the plot of glider landings is quite unreliable for the gliders outside the LZs. Of five Hamilcars in the Mehrhoog and northern Ellern area plotted on the map three just do not show on the aerial photographs taken on the 25th. A fourth one I am not sure about. I know the area very well, Mehrhoog is easy to make out with the street (Bahnhofstraße) crossing the railway, Ellern has distinctive patches of wood, so it is easy to find your way around on the aerials... check for yourselves, the photos do not match up with the map. I looked for Hamilcars. The gliders usually are easy to spot on the photos but even a close look does not reveal anything even though the map has a glider marked there.
I marked those Hamilcars and Horsas that are confirmed by the aerial photographs taken on March 25th:
Yeah I agree alberk, I lived in Hamminkeln for many years myself and know the area since my childhood so I know the area with the LZs myself. Some of the glider positions I've seen plotted on maps dont match up with aerial pictures from the 25th. The area I've shown with the hamilcar is the actual position that was marked on the map by alberk, if you look at the original zoomed out you can see the railroad track running south to north and the Reeser Straße to the west of the marked spot. With access to all those aerial pictures it might be time to mark gliders that have been plotted wrong.
Heres the link to the whole image with the Horsa on it, those who have a subscription can actually zoom on it, theres more to see even some heavily damaged gilders on the southern edge of the image... Töwen; Düsseldorf; Germany | NCAP - National Collection of Aerial Photography
I am coming back to our search for gliders which landed far off the mark. Today I was pointed to three medics of 225 Para Field Ambulance: Pte George Townend, Pte Kenneth Mathews and Pte Robbie A Kennedy. All three died on March 24th, 1945 and were buried at 143528 - far away from the LZs and DZs. I checked the aerial photographs and found this - could it be a crashed glider? At the same time another question comes up: Were some soldiers of 225 Para Field Ambulance carried in gliders?
Yes to personnel in gliders.... “ Place: BLA 1200 - MDS est. in area HAMMINKELN GERMANY at 185495. Section M.O's re-joined MDS within 4 hours from the time of "drop", leaving S/Sgt. & bearer party of 12 ORs to carry cas. from RAP to MDS. 2 Operating Theatres open in MDS. 12 Parachutists, 2 glider personnel missing.
Hi alberk. Another interesting discovery! The only hint I could find that men from 225th PFA arrived by glider comes from a short statement in the their war diary: "12 Parachutists, 2 glider personnel missing." They could possibly have been on one of the 12 5th Parachute Brigade Horsas (424-435) that left from RAF Shepherds Grove. The HQ RAMC left with 6th Div. HQ gliders from RAF Rivenhall but their WD makes no mention of a missing glider. Regards ... Oops - just cross posted with Alex.
I just found out that six RAF crew were buried at 150526. They were all killed on March 24th and were with 298 Squadron which towed gliders. After releasing their glider their aircraft made a turn north to make it back to the west.