Audio From the Past [E01] - WW2 - Avro Lancaster Crew Radio

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Audio From the Past [E01] - WW2 - Avro Lancaster Crew Radio
    In 1943, the Royal Air Force began a night bombing campaign against Germany, the like of which had never been seen before. Over the next twelve months, tens of thousands of aircrews flew across the North Sea to drop their bombs on german cities. They were opposed by the full force of the Luftwaffe, but also by a nightmare of flak, treacherously icy conditions and constant mechanical malfunctions. Most of these crews never finished their tour of operations, but were either shot down and killed, or taken prisoner by an increasingly hostile enemy.
    Transcript available here:
    dl.dropboxuser...
    Artwork by Piotr Forkasiewicz

Комментарии • 4,5 тыс.

  • @JaredFong595
    @JaredFong595 4 года назад +862

    "Jerry behind us! Shoot him down." *machine gun blasts "Did you get im? Yep i got im. Weeee! Yaaay! Bloody good shooting!"

    • @impguardwarhamer
      @impguardwarhamer 4 года назад +71

      "ok don't shout all at once"

    • @choppership465
      @choppership465 4 года назад +3

      and there were some cannons on the rear turret

    • @nil_db
      @nil_db 4 года назад +12

      "Don't he look lovely?"

    • @canobeansyummers1667
      @canobeansyummers1667 4 года назад +28

      @@choppership465 false they weren't cannons they were browning machine guns

    • @MaxC__
      @MaxC__ 4 года назад +2

      Timestamp

  • @cameronlaing261
    @cameronlaing261 4 года назад +749

    Any other country: oh shit we've been hit!!!! Oh no
    Britain: I think we've been hit personally. Yes we have oil leaking out nothing to worry about.

    • @darkknight1340
      @darkknight1340 4 года назад +73

      Reminds me a bit of the British Airways pilot flying his 747 over Jakarta and had all 4 engines flame out due to volcanic ash,he announced to the passengers that,we will be descending a bit but no need for concern,about 10 minutes later after they had dropped from 34,000 to 5,000 feet he contacted the cabin once again to say,OK,engines have restarted let's get back upstairs again,plus the passengers,the majority of whom were British never uttered a word of concern during the descent,and gave the pilot a polite round of applause,nobody does calm like we Brits!.

    • @StoutProper
      @StoutProper 4 года назад +29

      @@darkknight1340 must have been a while ago cos we ain't got many brits like that left

    • @StoutProper
      @StoutProper 4 года назад +9

      @Jude M the only enemy within is the powers that be that divide and rule and continue to rip us all off something stupid

    • @DaveGIS123
      @DaveGIS123 4 года назад +17

      My dad was a navigator on an RAF Catalina flying at night over the Mediterranean when they lost an engine. My dad asked his pilot "What happens if we lose the other one?" The pilot calmly said "We shall probably all be killed".

    • @vauxmoto9096
      @vauxmoto9096 4 года назад +2

      David Ramsay hardcore.

  • @leonh8288
    @leonh8288 2 года назад +686

    Very sad to know that many of them never returned home.
    I've adopted the grave of an 20 year old sergeant, who lost his live just a week after his birthday.
    His plane, a Handley Page, was shot down here in the south west of Holland.
    From the seven crewmembers, all of them died, two are still missing in action.
    His family never knew what happened, they knew he died, but that was it, untill i got in contact with a cousin of the sergeant.
    On the 24th of december, there will be a candle burning on his grave, together with 139 other candles, on the other graves on the cemetery were this sergeant is buried. There will be a light on their graves during Christmas time.
    Here in Holland we will always remember these brave heroes.
    Lest we forget!

    • @Insperato62
      @Insperato62 2 года назад +28

      Thank you.

    • @nthnmonkey
      @nthnmonkey Год назад +24

      Thank you and God Bless you. 🇱🇺 🇬🇧

    • @fionasaunders7646
      @fionasaunders7646 10 месяцев назад +20

      Yes thank you for your highly respectable acknowledgment, to these aircrews that gave us hard earned peace. God Bless you

    • @keltyk
      @keltyk 10 месяцев назад +20

      thank you. Makes me quite emotional to read that

    • @timwillis2629
      @timwillis2629 10 месяцев назад +30

      As an ex para, I am always in true admiration when I see the school children place flowers on the grave of the dead in arnhem. Thank you for being a nation that still remembers the sacrifices made. Unfortunately in the UK, we now allow our grave and monuments to be desecrated.

  • @EllJQ
    @EllJQ 4 года назад +1518

    "Theyre shooting at us now"
    "Are they?"
    "Yeah"
    "Okay"
    "Weve been hit unfortunately"
    "Okay"
    "Hello Skipper, oils leaking out of the front turret its nothing to worry about"
    "Okay"
    "Okay?"
    "Okay over the lake now"
    "146 Okay"
    They are all Legends Okay.

    • @TheVetusMores
      @TheVetusMores 4 года назад +73

      Indeed. I have such tremendous admiration and respect for their courage and fortitude. To merely buy _lunch_ for one of these gentlemen (meeting them is increasingly rare these days) would be a great honor for me. We owe them, well, everything.

    • @drhanschucrute9474
      @drhanschucrute9474 4 года назад +64

      'Okay '
      avro lancaster crew 1943

    • @breathdream9020
      @breathdream9020 4 года назад +17

      2:55

    • @capitainsheep1137
      @capitainsheep1137 3 года назад +27

      Almost sound like a gamer chat in warzone or some shit , that calm damn , they have Seen some shit

    • @jackmehoffe9372
      @jackmehoffe9372 Год назад +25

      @@capitainsheep1137 naaaa.
      Just British Mate

  • @darkknight1340
    @darkknight1340 4 года назад +2041

    Their level of calmness is astounding.

    • @williamescolantejr5871
      @williamescolantejr5871 4 года назад +32

      thats the scary part,the lull before the storm

    • @keighlancoe5933
      @keighlancoe5933 4 года назад +128

      You'd be surprised how quickly you can get used to something and just brush it off. I've seen videos of British soldiers just sat down eating their food, in the video you can see bullet rounds flying above their heads and they barely paid any attention to it, they just carried on eating and chatting and every now and again got up to return fire before getting back down to continue eating. Once you're in that kind of situation frequently it becomes normal to you

    • @johnnieireland2057
      @johnnieireland2057 4 года назад +60

      Approaching enemy spotlights and flak fire. "I could go for an Earl Grey Tea, would you mind fetching me a cup, 2 creams one sugar" "OK!"

    • @StoutProper
      @StoutProper 4 года назад +37

      Compare it to the modern audio of American pilots

    • @StoutProper
      @StoutProper 4 года назад +43

      @@keighlancoe5933 just the British stiff upper lip

  • @Gribbo9999
    @Gribbo9999 8 лет назад +270

    All shitting themselves on the inside who wouldn't be? And so calm on the intercom. What discipline. What bravery! "I think they are firing at us."

    • @azagar5044
      @azagar5044 7 лет назад +17

      Gribbo9999 those days you have something to fight and die for.

  • @rednovember2205
    @rednovember2205 8 лет назад +2452

    "They're firing at us now". "Are they"? "Yup."

    • @Firespectrum122
      @Firespectrum122 8 лет назад +37

      Thank you sir :)

    • @ChuckOwl
      @ChuckOwl  8 лет назад +290

      I wouldn't really compare USAAF bomber crews against RAF bomber crews. Both operated in incredibly difficult conditions: the Brits had to operate at night, in pitch dark against night fighters who were some of the most experienced and deadly pilots of the Luftwaffe. The Americans operated during the day, which made them incredibly vulnerable during long periods of time. The casualties on both the american and the british side were enormous: I would never consider saying either side was more brave than the other. Both operated in extremely dangerous operations. Check this graph: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_bombing_during_World_War_II#/media/File:Ussb-1.svg
      The USAAF and the RAF lost roughly 79,000 bomber crewmen each, the RAF lost 12,000 bombers while the USAAF lost about 10,000 bombers. The USAAF performed 750,000 bombing sorties and dropped 1,400,000 tons of bombs, while the RAF performed 687,000 bombing sorties and dropped 1,300,000 tons of bombs.

    • @fradrikarni3618
      @fradrikarni3618 8 лет назад +32

      Yeah i noticed your a big fucking idiot. Why don't you keep your dumb opinion to yourself

    • @meganwhite9090
      @meganwhite9090 8 лет назад +50

      Please leave that mentality at the door, every man and woman that fought in any of the major global conflicts is probably braver than we could hope to be, they gave up so much so that we today can enjoy a taste of freedom, freedom they may never have gotten to experience in life. The grief they had to put their families, friends, lovers and children through to fight to secure the freedom of the meek and those who would otherwise be crushed by the Nazis and the Germans is testament to just how brave all men and women of the two World Wars really were.
      So next time you say one side was braver than the other, just think for a moment, what they gave to fight so that we wouldn't have to.

    • @turanmert711
      @turanmert711 8 лет назад +7

      Jesus christ, +Bit Refresh didn't say it as a fact. He/she said that "More than American I'd say", see that? "I'D SAY". He/she did not say it as a fact but as an opinion.

  • @colinheaton2679
    @colinheaton2679 2 года назад +403

    The German night fighter pilots I interviewed (also interviewed RAF Bomber Command pilots and crews) had nothing but admiration for the bomber crews. Wolfgang Falck said "There were no braver men in my opinion, knowing what they had to face, and still they flew their missions."

    • @heikoplotner2636
      @heikoplotner2636 2 года назад +11

      Die Verluste ! Bei uns am Deister kam einer über der Lauenauer Allee runter. Fand durch Zufall ein Stück Plexiglas vor vielen Jahren im Wald. Die Besatzungsmitglieder waren alle verbrannt, wie Puppen. Wurden am Straßenrand vorübergehend vergraben.

    • @TheEarl777
      @TheEarl777 10 месяцев назад +33

      The most unfortunate thing is that the bomber crews and German pilots might have been the best of friends if diplomacy had been better handled after WW1.

    • @skillsphere9245
      @skillsphere9245 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@TheEarl777this and this counts for all wars worldwide we could live in peace a man motzi who unified china in huge civil war between 40 regions proved it !

    • @pseudonym745
      @pseudonym745 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​??? If you would explain a little further what you are referring to, please...

    • @brianjones4026
      @brianjones4026 10 месяцев назад +10

      Squadron Leader George Leonard Johnson, MBE, DFM (25 November 1921 − 7 December 2022), better known as Johnny Johnson, was a British Royal Air Force officer who was the last surviving original member of No. 617 Squadron RAF and of Operation Chastise, the "Dambusters" raid of 1943. ....
      The list of all the brave men that cooperated in Operation Chastise:
      AJ-G
      Wg Cdr G P Gibson DSO & Bar DFC & Bar
      Pilot AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded VC
      Born Simla, India, 12 August 1918
      KIA 20 September 1944
      Sgt J Pulford
      Flight engineer AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFM
      Born Hull, 24 December 1919
      KIA 13 February 1944
      Plt Off H T Taerum
      Navigator AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFC
      Born Milo, Alberta, Canada, 22 May 1920
      KIA 16 September 1943
      Flt Lt R E G Hutchison DFC
      Wireless operator AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded Bar to DFC
      Born Liverpool, 26 April 1918
      KIA 16 September 1943
      Plt Off F M Spafford DFM
      Bomb aimer AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFC
      Born Adelaide, South Australia, 16 June 1918
      KIA 16 September 1943
      Flt Sgt G A Deering
      Front gunner AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFC
      Born Kirkintilloch, Scotland, 23 July 1919
      KIA 16 September 1943
      Flt Lt R D Trevor-Roper DFM
      Rear gunner AJ-G
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFC
      Born, Shanklin, Isle of Wight, 19 May 1915
      KIA 31 March 1944
      AJ-M
      Flt Lt J V Hopgood DFC & Bar
      Pilot
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born Hurst, Berkshire, 29 August 1921 [ 1]
      Sgt C C Brennan
      Flight engineer
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 22 February 1916, Calgary, Alberta, Canada [ 1]
      Flg Off K Earnshaw
      Navigator
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born Bridlington, Yorkshire, 23 June 1918 [ 1]
      Sgt J W Minchin
      Wireless operator
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 29 November 1915, Bourton on the Water, Gloucestershire [ 1]
      Flt Sgt J W Fraser
      Bomb aimer
      Survived Dams Raid1 PoW1
      Born 22 September 1922, Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
      Died Saltery Bay, British Columbia, Canada, 2 June 1962 [ 1]
      Plt Off G H F G Gregory DFM
      Front gunner
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born Govan, Glasgow, 24 June 1917 [ 1]
      Plt Off A F Burcher DFM
      Rear gunner
      Survived Dams Raid1 PoW1
      Born Vaucluse, Sydney, Australia, 15 March 1922
      Died Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 9 August 1995 [ 1]
      AJ-P
      Flt Lt H B Martin DFC
      Pilot
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DSO
      Born Edgecliffe, Sydney, Australia, 27 February 1918
      Died London, 3 November 1988 [ 1]
      Plt Off I Whittaker
      Flight engineer
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born Newcastle on Tyne, 9 September 1921
      Died Wendover, Buckinghamshire, 22 August 1979 [ 1]
      Flt Lt J F Leggo DFC
      Navigator
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded Bar to DFC
      Born Sydney, Australia, 21 April 1916
      Died Brisbane, Australia, 11 November 1983 [ 1]
      Flg Off L Chambers
      Wireless operator
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFC
      Born Karamea, New Zealand, 18 February 1919
      Died Karamea, New Zealand, 1 March 1985 [ 1]
      Flt Lt R C Hay DFC
      Bomb aimer
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded Bar to DFC
      Born Renmark, South Australia, 4 November 1913
      KIA 13 February 1944 [ 1]
      Plt Off B T Foxlee DFM
      Front gunner
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born Queensland, Australia, 7 March 1920
      Died Nottingham, 6 March 1985 [ 1]
      Flt Sgt T D Simpson
      Rear gunner
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFM
      Born Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 23 November 1917
      Died Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 2 April 1998 [ 1]
      AJ-A
      Sqn Ldr H M Young DFC & Bar
      Pilot
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born London, 20 May 1915 [ 1]
      Sgt D T Horsfall
      Flight engineer
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born Bramley, Yorkshire, 16 April 1920 [ 1]
      Flt Sgt C W Roberts
      Navigator
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 19 January 1921, Cromer, Norfolk [ 1]
      Sgt L W Nichols
      Wireless operator
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 17 May 1910, Northwood, Middlesex [ 1]
      Flg Off V S MacCausland
      Bomb aimer
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 1 February 1913, Tyne Valley, Prince Edward Island, Canada [ 1]
      Sgt G A Yeo
      Front gunner
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 9 July 1922, Barry Dock, Glamorgan [ 1]
      Sgt W Ibbotson
      Rear gunner
      Killed on Dams Raid
      Born 18 September 1913, Netherton, Wakefield, Yorkshire [ 1]
      AJ-J
      Flt Lt D J H Maltby DFC
      Pilot
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DSO
      Born 10 May 1920, Baldslow, Sussex
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      Sgt W Hatton
      Flight engineer
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 24 March 1920, Wakefield, Yorkshire
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      Sgt V Nicholson
      Navigator
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFM
      Born 15 February 1923, Newcastle on Tyne
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      Sgt A J B Stone
      Wireless operator
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 5 December 1920 Winchester, Hampshire
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      Plt Off J Fort
      Bomb aimer
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFC
      Born 14 January 1912, Colne, Lancashire
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      Sgt V Hill
      Front gunner
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 6 December 1921, Berkeley, Gloucestershire
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      Sgt H T Simmonds
      Rear gunner
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 25 December 1921, Burgess Hill, Sussex
      KIA 15 September 1943 [ 1]
      AJ-L
      Flt Lt D J Shannon DFC
      Pilot
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DSO
      Born 27 May 1922, Unley Park, South Australia
      Died 8 April 1993, London [ 1]
      Sgt R J Henderson
      Flight engineer
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 17 June 1920, Tarbrax, Lanarkshire
      Died 18 February 1961, Limassol, Cyprus [ 1]
      Flg Off D R Walker DFC
      Navigator
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded Bar to DFC
      Born 20 November 1917, Blairmore, Alberta, Canada
      Died 17 November 2001, Blairmore, Alberta, Canada [ 1]
      Flg Off B Goodale DFC
      Wireless operator
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 12 June 1919, Addington, Kent
      Died 16 December 1977, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk [ 1]
      Flt Sgt L J Sumpter
      Bomb aimer
      Survived Dams Raid
      Awarded DFM
      Born 20 September 1911, Kettering, Northamptonshire
      Died 30 November 1993, Luton, Bedfordshire [ 1]
      Sgt B Jagger
      Front gunner
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 9 November 1921, London
      KIA 30 April 1944 [ 1]
      Flg Off J Buckley
      Rear gunner
      Survived Dams Raid
      Born 1 May 1919, Bradford, Yorkshire
      Died 6 May 1990, Bradford, Yorkshire [ 1]

  • @buckrowe9196
    @buckrowe9196 4 года назад +473

    What really gets me about this is I’m a 21 year old college student taking his first flying lessons. A lot of these boys in the Lancasters weren’t much older than I am. Hell, a lot of pilots in this damn war were younger than I am, and they were flying Spitfires, Mustangs, Lancasters, Fortresses, etc:. I’m so lucky to be able to attend class and fly a Cessna in the States because of these brave men. Thank you, gentlemen.

    • @goodshipkaraboudjan
      @goodshipkaraboudjan 3 года назад +16

      I was blown away when I was 18 and went solo for the first time in a 172N after a dozen hours when afterwards I was told the airfield I was flying out of was an old RAAF ETS base, they would do 8 hours in a 60ish HP Tiger Moth, go solo then get thrown into a 1000ish HP Kittyhawk or a Spitfire! Others got thrown into Bomber Command doing single pilot operations in a 4000ish HP Lancaster or Halifax. Mind blowing.

    • @keepitreal6487
      @keepitreal6487 3 года назад +5

      @@goodshipkaraboudjan and spare a thght for the ATS. Read the pilots notes then shift that Lanc to such and such....almost impossible to believe.

    • @npg68
      @npg68 3 года назад +8

      Then think about RAF pilots during WWI - average life span of two weeks if they survived training.

    • @jackmehoffe9372
      @jackmehoffe9372 Год назад +1

      Well said

    • @silverdale3207
      @silverdale3207 Год назад +3

      Was thinking the same, very young but all sound like they're in their 50s

  • @SermedAlWasiti
    @SermedAlWasiti 4 года назад +106

    One hears about the British "stiff upper lip" etc...But here you "see" it in action...They deserved to win the war...

    • @nutsackmania
      @nutsackmania 2 года назад +1

      They are experienced professionals; why is this some surprise to people? Listen to B-52 crews over Hanoi, same thing. This isn't some unique quality the British possess.

  • @matthewgee7945
    @matthewgee7945 4 года назад +700

    "There's a few searchlights ahead of us - yes about a hundred, never seen anything like this before". Jesus, brave brave men.

    • @caleb2507
      @caleb2507 4 года назад +6

      Terribly brave men, bombing women and children and destroying an entire culture in the name of “freedom” and “progress”

    • @1993Crag
      @1993Crag 4 года назад +64

      @@caleb2507 Funnily enough despite the worst of allied efforts; German culture is fine. And the whole it was done for the express purpose of stopping Germany doing far worse to far more cultures.

    • @caleb2507
      @caleb2507 4 года назад +14

      Crag_r Is it? The Germany of today is castrated. The military pride and prowess; gone, the genius and artists; gone. Replaced with a communist that pushes refugees and a liberal culture which will see Germany an Arabic country in the next few decades. The wrong side won the war, simple as that. Germany had no plans beyond saving Europe from communism and the path that Europe is now on. To their dying breath they warned of the threat of communism. Take a look at the world today, Europe is full of “liberal socialism” which is destroying them. Look up Count Richard Kalergi and his plan for Europe, he founded the EU with the aim of destroying Europe.

    • @1993Crag
      @1993Crag 4 года назад +30

      @@caleb2507 Eh, most of the West will have plenty of drinks during Octoberfest, its doing fine.
      What the fuck is wrong with you? Look at Generalplan Ost, everyone East of Germany dead isn't what i'd call saving Europe. Fuck off Nazi.

    • @caleb2507
      @caleb2507 4 года назад +7

      Crag_r I love how German culture is just Oktoberfest to you. Spot on mate. You obviously live under a rock if you think the mass rape of Christmas 2016 is totally okay. Wrong with me? I think for myself sheep. I thought like you once then I turned off the media, read for myself and opened my eyes. It was a work in progress that was eventually abandoned. It wasnt even the most horrific thing conceived or enacted by any government past or present. The modern Democracy’s have done far worse but pretend to be the good guys so people like you will only parrot and not think for yourself. I said from communism which has done far more damage than nazism ever did. You never hear about that strangely. Last soldiers defending Hitler were French. Ghandi supported Hitler. Call me a nazi but at least Im not an idiot that thinks 5-year old trans, individualism, pornography, drug addiction and shady governments is “victory”. Go back to sleep child.

  • @garethbattersby
    @garethbattersby 4 года назад +792

    I love how the speed and politeness of the communication sounds like theyre a group of lads trying to find a good parking spot more than flying over enemies taking fire and being a second from death.
    Makes you proud to be British

    • @jrcrawford4
      @jrcrawford4 Год назад +26

      Makes you proud, period.

    • @perspii2808
      @perspii2808 Год назад +7

      Agreed but idk what being british has to do with it lol

    • @johanbtheman
      @johanbtheman Год назад +48

      @@perspii2808 it has since the audio recording is of british soldiers.

    • @jeannemariagriffin5820
      @jeannemariagriffin5820 Год назад +16

      So disciplined and stoic

    • @kzrlgo
      @kzrlgo Год назад +5

      This comment post Brexit? How times changed eh?

  • @BoilerBloodline
    @BoilerBloodline 4 года назад +109

    Gotta love the Brits! Even when flying through heavy flak and being shot at from all sides, they all still sound as if they’re talking over the table at a ritzy dinner.

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 2 года назад +3

      I was trying to pick accents. One wss a Scot.

    • @jackmehoffe9372
      @jackmehoffe9372 2 года назад +10

      @@georgielancaster1356 Yorkshire mate

    • @goodshipkaraboudjan
      @goodshipkaraboudjan 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@georgielancaster1356 There were two Aussies in the crew as well.

    • @SuperEdge67
      @SuperEdge67 8 месяцев назад

      40% of Bomber command crews were from the commonwealth nearly all of those either Canadian, Australian or New Zealanders.

  • @glennthunderer1685
    @glennthunderer1685 6 лет назад +274

    8:50 the cheering of the crew when they realized the downed the german fighter.

    • @__z4ne__823
      @__z4ne__823 4 года назад +26

      Bloody good boys!!!!!!! Made me shed a tear.

    • @bergssprangare
      @bergssprangare 4 года назад +24

      78 years later and millions of ppl are flying with them again..I could almost feel the plane being hit..The Best of the best..

    • @captainoblivious_yt
      @captainoblivious_yt 4 года назад +22

      "Don't scream all at once!"

    • @MichaelJ44
      @MichaelJ44 4 года назад +6

      Thunder Photography
      Quite sad to think about it. Killing our German brother for clique interests

    • @james9311
      @james9311 4 года назад +10

      Michael sad in the bigger picture but at that moment it was them lads or him

  • @morrismckinnon6047
    @morrismckinnon6047 4 года назад +671

    "I think we've been hit, personally" He sounded so chill I have the vision of him sipping a cuppa tea after he said that! xD

    • @hmabboud
      @hmabboud 4 года назад +4

      Hahahahahahahaha

    • @cheezBurger420
      @cheezBurger420 4 года назад +13

      Stoic bastards

    • @ThePierre58
      @ThePierre58 4 года назад +6

      Listening to this is so inspiring.

    • @Rambonii
      @Rambonii 4 года назад +2

      Yeeees

    • @tonycoxall7370
      @tonycoxall7370 4 года назад +9

      Love to know if these guys made it through the war...

  • @Lion_Heart_33
    @Lion_Heart_33 5 месяцев назад +15

    Speaking as a Zimbabwean of British heritage/stock. These men are heroes. Men among men. God bless their souls. With best wishes, blessings and kind thoughts to my British kith and kin from Zimbabwe. 🇿🇼🍻🇬🇧 🇿🇼🤝🏻🇬🇧

    • @ninaevans4501
      @ninaevans4501 2 месяца назад +1

      @Star_Lion_33
      Hi, my boyfriend (Wayne) served with the RAF. He was a pilot. He listens to these old recordings with tears in his eyes. Although he was born in 1971, he cannot forget the loss of so many RAF lives.
      He is also JEWISH.
      😔😔😔😔😔😔😔😔😔😔😔

  • @101ckes
    @101ckes 4 года назад +630

    I hear this and it makes me feel humbled. I get up every day and mostly moan about going to work and the price of everything going up etc. But what the bloody hell have I got to moan about. This clip has put me to shame. I am not fit to shine these men’s shoes. I salute and thank them with every fibre of my being

    • @eoindee7007
      @eoindee7007 4 года назад +22

      I agree 100%. Their discipline and coolness under circumstances of unimaginable stress and fear is both humbling and inspiring. My absolute and utmost respect and gratitude to these giants of men with backbones of pure steel. Greetings from Ireland.

    • @peterkeane7767
      @peterkeane7767 4 года назад +3

      @Austin McCanless I believe you are quite right re the quality of Service both then and now. It is always worth remembering that they were often relatively young Men and to lose that can diminish how extraordinary their efforts were.
      War IS Hell,and it must be! It is the ultimate error,especially of any Society that considers itself rational or Civilised.
      Then as Now it is necessary to strip away so much of the Positive,Cooperative,Constructive aspects aquired by Family and Social Conditioning and the People who find themselves having to undertake the experience seldom do so without significant cost both Physical and emotional.
      While this can often result in long term damaging effects the alternative where Combat Operations are conducted in the relative safety of 'Remote' control of Drones,etc. Can be just as costly in emotional and Mental Health.
      It must never be 'easy' to impose Military Combat Operations,especially on 'Civilian' populations,but as long as Politicians,Diplomats etc. Fail to 'Keep the Peace' and set the World ablaze,Young People who are fit and strong enough to 'Meet the Call' will find themselves obliged, if not Compelled to do so and 'Put the fire out'! Sadly somewhere in the World this Seems allways to be the case,however when called to 'Stand their Ground' I am sure the Youth of Today will shoulder their responsibilities with all the fortitude and purpose that the previous Generations have,
      Of course if we truly appreciate all who have gone before the greatest way of showing our respect in a 'Free' Country is to ensure we do everything we can to avoid sending them in the first place!

    • @GeschichtsBlitz
      @GeschichtsBlitz 4 года назад +2

      dont underestimate the effects of different drugs that were common sense in every nation

    • @karmakaze6694
      @karmakaze6694 4 года назад +6

      Here is the truly amazing aspect: those men were just like you and me, but then their world was turned upside down and forced them into situations that neither they nor we could ever have imagined. They rose to the occasion and now we look back and believe they were something special. The truth is they were not. That is what makes what they did all the more incredible. They were not supermen but what they did makes us think they were.
      Unless we find ourselves thrust into the same awful circumstances, we can have no idea whether we too would rise to the occasion... but I suspect that now, just like then, many would and many would not.

    • @rhedinrage1601
      @rhedinrage1601 4 года назад

      Well the price of everything going up, especially beyond inflation, is actually to do with the slow march of communism, so yeah, stiff upper lip, brave up old chap but be ever vigilant, the damn commies and the nazis never really went away, we just shrunk them.

  • @nickviner1225
    @nickviner1225 4 года назад +1141

    My late next door neighbour did 37 missions as a rear gunner in a lancaster he was 88 years old when he died. What a wonderful gentleman he was..

    • @KumaBean
      @KumaBean 4 года назад +26

      My hat's off to him, legend 🤜🤛

    • @Liquido562
      @Liquido562 4 года назад +5

      Wasn't in Kent, was it?

    • @nicktaylor2820
      @nicktaylor2820 4 года назад +74

      My dad did 89 ops in Wellingtons, Sterlings and Lancs as a WopAG and survived the war and continued to serve until 1975. He died in 2017 aged 97.

    • @nickviner1225
      @nickviner1225 4 года назад +20

      @@nicktaylor2820 Wow I thought 37 missions was good. What a hero

    • @KumaBean
      @KumaBean 4 года назад +16

      Nick Taylor Agreed with Nick, your Dad was a true hero, respect and best wishes to you and yours 🍻

  • @fabiomendonca749
    @fabiomendonca749 8 лет назад +615

    Those men where brave as fuck.

    • @fabiomendonca749
      @fabiomendonca749 8 лет назад +16

      *****
      Brave as fuck I say

    • @ToDamnRight
      @ToDamnRight 8 лет назад +37

      and calm asf

    • @-Garviel_Loken-
      @-Garviel_Loken- 7 лет назад +30

      These guys have some balls. Flying at night, over enemy territory in an aircraft filled with explosives with enemy tracer and flak rounds exploding around you. I don't know how these guys did it.

    • @javiergilvidal1558
      @javiergilvidal1558 7 лет назад +4

      Not necessarily... if you're flying in can of sardines in the midst of that mayhem, you have to keep telling yourself and your mates that it's all OK and "we'll make it through" even if you soiled your pants and you don't believe your own words.... They had no other option than be "brave", but they were scared to death!

    • @javiergilvidal1558
      @javiergilvidal1558 7 лет назад +2

      Yes, and? I never said anything on the contrary; but, come to think of it, it's not too believable they would cram the bulky and heavy recording equipment of the early '40's into the extremely cramped space of a Lancaster for no purpose or reason. The Lancaster was difficult enough to bail out of without the further encumbrance of those enormous recording sets, everything was extremely unreliable and brittle (remember: the Allies did not know the magnetic tape yet; that technology was nicked from the Germans after the war, so recordings had to be made on bakelite records), and, given the high loss rate, they would have had to equip many bombers with those recording facilities, for no clear advantage to be gained therefrom.... What we hear in this audio might as well have been a studio production, perhaps to boost morale. But authenticity issues aside, your observation is not apposite to my original post

  • @alanbobbymcguire5099
    @alanbobbymcguire5099 2 года назад +701

    I’m a 58 year old Scotsman. And my heart is bursting with pride that these were the chaps who went before us. May God bless them.

    • @jackmehoffe9372
      @jackmehoffe9372 11 месяцев назад +13

      All of us who listen to this mate.

    • @GregorSass-Ranitz
      @GregorSass-Ranitz 10 месяцев назад

      Phosphor- and High Explosives-bombing of cities packed with civilians and also with refugees. "Heart bursting with pride."

    • @thecornfieldiii2069
      @thecornfieldiii2069 10 месяцев назад +14

      I dunno, they were bombing civilians

    • @tonka1983
      @tonka1983 10 месяцев назад

      @@thecornfieldiii2069 idiot

    • @AA-or4dt
      @AA-or4dt 10 месяцев назад +5

      and look at the state of our world now. Is it really better?

  • @stevedjurovich194
    @stevedjurovich194 8 лет назад +870

    "Watch Your height"...."I'm watching everything." Their calmness and radio discipline under fire is amazing. Almost casually reporting they'd been hit and leaking oil. Balls of Steel.

    • @cmdfarsight
      @cmdfarsight 7 лет назад +37

      Steve Djurovich It's how the guy says nothing to worry about that makes me laugh. Such bravery.

    • @kokenhammer
      @kokenhammer 7 лет назад +11

      As a youngster I worked with many guys who were pilots or aircrew flying in Lancasters and Spitfires. Not one ever talked about what went on. But I do remember being at an RSA (Returned Services) Club one time when a few beers had been had and some guy was verbally accosted I believe because he was mouthing off a bit. Usually those guys who did that never saw the real action.

    • @infledermaus
      @infledermaus 6 лет назад +15

      Steve Djurovich They had to stay straight and level until the bombs hit and a picture was taken automatically or the mission wouldn't count. Those seconds waiting for that pic must have been agonizing!

    • @annodomini7887
      @annodomini7887 6 лет назад +10

      Of course they were calm, you have to realize that they had a job to do and were highly trained soldiers, from every veteran will tell you “your not scared while your in the danger it alway before and after”.

    • @arrrgee
      @arrrgee 6 лет назад +7

      Fortunately it was oil from the gun turret so nothing too serious to worry about, the engines would have been a different story.

  • @2st0ned2pwn1
    @2st0ned2pwn1 9 лет назад +730

    "Yeah they're searching for us... bastards" Had me in stiches :p 1:15

    • @goodshipkaraboudjan
      @goodshipkaraboudjan 7 лет назад +62

      "oh hell....certainly illuminates things doesn't it?" Brave as fuck in the face of death.

    • @henerymag
      @henerymag 7 лет назад +23

      Yes they were. No doubt scared as hell, but would never let it show, just carried on and did their job. Amazing men.

    • @stoneblue1795
      @stoneblue1795 7 лет назад +29

      Their relative calmness must have helped keep each other's nerve's from totally shattering and causing a panic. They were so matter-of-fact about it, which I think helped them keep their focus. They were tough to say the least. Thanks boys.

    • @blackcountryme
      @blackcountryme 7 лет назад +10

      Sunray OC You didn't want to let your mates down, that was probably the most important thing.

    • @hcrun
      @hcrun 7 лет назад +2

      @ blackcountryme....
      Rubbish!
      Each did the task for which he was trained and hoped to Christ that they came out of it okay.
      Not wanting to let your mates down, when everyone was confined to the interior of a fuselage, had stuff-all to do with it.

  • @marcuspeacock9529
    @marcuspeacock9529 4 года назад +175

    John Stanton, out of Oakington, lost over Berlin 24 Nov 1943. Lest we forget

    • @duncandunn1930
      @duncandunn1930 4 года назад +7

      Respect

    • @MikeDonner
      @MikeDonner 4 года назад +5

      Everyone obviously forgot, look at the country now.

    • @jamiedenton2321
      @jamiedenton2321 4 года назад +2

      ​@@MikeDonner Funny, keep seeing these "look at the country now" comments.
      Do you want to go back to this time? Were things simpler for you back then?
      Sometimes I think others just watched a totally different video to myself.
      I'm willing to bet all these veterans would laugh at such comments, our lives are *immeasurably* better and easier than their's was.

    • @jamiedenton2321
      @jamiedenton2321 4 года назад

      @@MikeDonner Nope, I think I get it.
      _"Tough"_ guy crying about how the country left him behind.
      🥺😫😭

    • @ClaireBarre.
      @ClaireBarre. 3 года назад +4

      My first cousin once removed, Flight Lieutenant James Bannon, of Liverpool - 'our Jimmy' as he was known - is thought to have perished on the same flight as Flight Sergeant John Stanton out of RAF Oakington to Berlin on November 24, 1943. Jimmy was only 24 and had just qualified as a maths teacher.

  • @OrlandoDibiskitt
    @OrlandoDibiskitt 4 года назад +275

    I treated a terminally ill gentleman once. We got talking and he had been the tail gunner in a Lancaster. This guy was in terrible pain and knew he was dying. He remained brave gentlemanly, and pleasant at all times.
    In the very next cubicle was a drug overdose patient carrying on something horrible... swearing at staff and destroying hospital property. Couldn't help but notice the generational distance.
    Cudos to the elderly gentleman... he was a total star and a hero!

    • @jasonhunt19201
      @jasonhunt19201 2 года назад +15

      difference between a hero and a junkie. If I had been a tail gunner in the war and seen what the UK had become Id welcome a terminal illness too

    • @83j049733rfe4
      @83j049733rfe4 Год назад +9

      One already crawled out of hell and the other was right past the 9th gate, then and there.
      Something I've had to learn is... You can't ask or expect someone not to be pathetic. Petty. To have you bear witness to their fullest resolve and faculty. To go forth and dread not, carry on in some inspiring way, it's not exactly something that can be taught. It's like a current of energy. It has to be transferred via the process of it's witnessing, it's observation.
      Your gentleman just can't be compared to his neighbor. Good and proud as he demonstrated himself, the man past the curtain didn't share his former experience, and it would have been no guarantee he'd be any more certain if he had. Suffering is, after all, relative, and the first thing to fail it so often is language itself.
      I could never communicate my own experiences to you, after all. Not to their fullest. Your gentlemen, that addict couldn't either.
      God's love be with them both.
      And thank you for tending to them.

    • @TheEarl777
      @TheEarl777 10 месяцев назад +5

      His old mates would have been waiting for him. I’m sure of that.

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@jivemike Leftie spotted

    • @AC-fg4kg
      @AC-fg4kg 10 месяцев назад

      @@urmum3773What do you think the opium wars were about mate? Fucking cookies? Daft wee old man, back to yer hole

  • @Cokecakepopcorn
    @Cokecakepopcorn 8 лет назад +370

    Yeah we been hit a little bit, oh we could die, yep, well onwards anyway, can't let that spoil our day.

    • @rileydavies3517
      @rileydavies3517 5 лет назад +6

      Tom Britton they sound just like the most stereotypical British person ever

    • @danieldavies4561
      @danieldavies4561 5 лет назад +7

      @@rileydavies3517 proper died that lingo here in the uk everyone dribbles when they talk now

    • @NiSiochainGanSaoirse
      @NiSiochainGanSaoirse 4 года назад +13

      These men had spines of steel and wore JEANS, not dresses.
      They used proper language, not ums and erms and innits.
      They worked hard and saved their country.

    • @weyman4317
      @weyman4317 4 года назад +3

      Tom Britton Real Heroes- not Premiership Footballers writhing on the ground cos they got a little tap.

    • @petehall889
      @petehall889 4 года назад +3

      Well, that's not as daft as it sounds. My father was attacked by a JU88 nightfighter in 1941 and his aircraft significantly damaged, but he still continued to the target, with oil and petrol running down the mainplane and a struggling engine. He made four passes over the target at low level because he couldn't gain much height, before dropping the bombs. They came home safely to the nearest airfield and landed on one wheel, as the other had been shot away by cannon-fire. I can't imagine doing that when I was 20 years old.

  • @shaunw9270
    @shaunw9270 4 года назад +283

    Whenever I'm feeling down , I listen to this in awe. Real men in control of the situation . They were no doubt scared as anyone would be , but they make it sound like just another day at the office. Truly inspiring and a kick up the arse .

    • @m.d.5463
      @m.d.5463 4 года назад +3

      I wonder how 'controlled' the men in the shot down bombers sounded, when their plane fell apart in mid-air or any other serious trouble. I mean this tape was from a successful crew and plane. But there were many others happen to go down, crash and die. Be aware of them also.
      No matter what religion you belong to, one once said, they all start praying when faceing their own end.

    • @ericscaillet2232
      @ericscaillet2232 4 года назад +8

      @@m.d.5463 we will all face our demise in what ever way when it comes,just you remember your words as it happens 😒

    • @MegaLJ3
      @MegaLJ3 4 года назад +3

      Yes they were brave. I'd like to know what happened to the youthful Brits where they let a foreign invasion of people take over their country and telling them where they can and can't go.

    • @karmakaze6694
      @karmakaze6694 4 года назад +1

      @Jude M You sound like a beta bitch.

    • @justinneill5003
      @justinneill5003 4 года назад +2

      M. D. They had faith in the cause for their mission, and back then many of them probably also had faith in God to give them strength. If I lit a fire under your backside you probably wouldn’t be ready to accept it. The physical shock & pain they would’ve felt was also real, but the difference is that they were ready for it.

  • @devinthierault
    @devinthierault 8 лет назад +439

    I think we've been hit personally.

    • @jdmac44
      @jdmac44 7 лет назад +10

      ZubiForce 2:24

    • @james9311
      @james9311 4 года назад +15

      We’ve been holed, oils leaking out of the front turret but it’s nothing to worry about

    • @koitorob
      @koitorob 4 года назад +3

      To be fair, i think it was personal!

    • @teresahall5835
      @teresahall5835 4 года назад +10

      To be fair I think personally THAT THEY were THE (LAST) of a dying breed OF (REAL MEN WITH REAL COURAGE),we see the difference between the two Every Day.🙁❤🇫🇴🇬🇧

    • @graham2631
      @graham2631 4 года назад +8

      It almost reads like a Monty python skit. Stiff upper lip an all that.
      But their serious.

  • @TrulsHJohnsen
    @TrulsHJohnsen 4 года назад +104

    "These colours don`t run"... This is both amazing and humbling to listen to...... Thank you RAF, for your massive contribution to winning WW2...

  • @resnonverba137
    @resnonverba137 4 года назад +150

    Brought tears to my eyes. I find their unflappable bravery and 'get on with it' attitude to be both inspiring and humbling. Thank you chaps, one and all.

  • @KiwiGraggle
    @KiwiGraggle 7 лет назад +333

    This is one of the most awesome things I have ever heard and seen on RUclips, seriously
    Awesome.

    • @westphalenglocke9491
      @westphalenglocke9491 4 года назад +1

      Yup, amazing that these men killed more than 280.000 innocent civil persons... AMAZING!

    • @edcarson3113
      @edcarson3113 4 года назад +16

      @@westphalenglocke9491 it's called war kiddo

    • @Sarconthewolf
      @Sarconthewolf 4 года назад +13

      @@westphalenglocke9491 Grow up

    • @westphalenglocke9491
      @westphalenglocke9491 4 года назад

      @@edcarson3113 it seems like that the allies have the view that killikg innocent people is war... like vietnam etc.
      But in my eyes, this isnt war... but okay

    • @westphalenglocke9491
      @westphalenglocke9491 4 года назад

      @@Sarconthewolf why? is it ok to kill innocent persons? but what else should i expect from you...

  • @HisMajestyWalrus
    @HisMajestyWalrus 7 лет назад +274

    Aye it is true what they say.
    Hard times, make strong men.
    Strong men, make good times.
    Good times, make weak men.
    Weak men, make hard times.

    • @zerofox7347
      @zerofox7347 5 лет назад +15

      Freedom
      Apathy
      Tyranny
      Revolution
      Freedom

    • @americanman4746
      @americanman4746 4 года назад +2

      So true!

    • @ericscaillet2232
      @ericscaillet2232 4 года назад +3

      @@americanman4746 being aware of knowledge and its path should allow one not to repeat it if that knowledge brings wrongness ,hence what is the problem unless fake knowledge is imparted upon us😒

    • @FranktheDachshund
      @FranktheDachshund 4 года назад +5

      @Jude M I would argue that we are at step 3 with attempts being made to destroy links to the past, free speech being hindered, free thought being repressed, mob rules pushing out the law. Revolution will be the pushback from the conservative element on the progressives.

    • @aquillandscroll6428
      @aquillandscroll6428 4 года назад +3

      Jude M Is that so? Is it that no one asks why one side will end up destroying the other? How pathetic indeed, millions have died and the world still clings onto it’s tribalistic nature. They know that tribalistic nature will lead to division and eventually conflict. But they excuse it under the notion that it will be a loss of culture. Under the notion that a culture of a society must always stay the same as it has been in the past. But it will change.
      Whether it is for the greater or worse.
      The modern left you speak of are but mere opportunists using the banner of the movement that founded the very NHS, do not be mistaken with who the real left are like the Germans were mistaken.
      The left and the right seek to fix problems but the extreme people within them just end up shit stirring and creating conflict.

  • @UnknownPersononGoogle
    @UnknownPersononGoogle 2 года назад +80

    01:09 always makes me smile when he mentions how many search lights and the person who responds does a little scoff and says “Too many I reckon.” They were the best of us.

    • @joshualumsden
      @joshualumsden 9 месяцев назад +1

      Imagine in all the Flak fire knowing any moment they could be hit they still had their humour made me laugh when I heard it

  • @robynn144
    @robynn144 7 лет назад +386

    Brave flyboys... I doubt they expected youtubers (like us) listening to their chatter 70+ years later! :) It is great audio like this has been kept for later generations like us.

    • @Irishandtired
      @Irishandtired 6 лет назад +9

      The New Englanders don't care about these things.

    • @robynn144
      @robynn144 6 лет назад +8

      No way these brave flyboys in the 1940s possibly could have even IMAGINED what RUclips is. Biut it is recordingss such så these, that keep memory of the Valiant nightflyers of we3, Alive. This is epecially important Know that the fighying men soon Will passe on

    • @jeremybear573
      @jeremybear573 6 лет назад +4

      It's too bad flight recording wasn't standard back then. What true insight these recordings provide us and the context it gives. Most people only know what the Hollywood Scripts have formulated inside of our perceptions about what these great men and women actually did. I would love to hear broadcast over the Pacific and Italian fronts as well. True blue American here

  • @ctiley2212
    @ctiley2212 4 года назад +406

    They sound like old men when in reality they were only in their early 20's.

    • @daneelolivaw602
      @daneelolivaw602 4 года назад +37

      I knew a man that was a Lancaster pilot during the war, he was under twenty years old.

    • @mikewellwood1412
      @mikewellwood1412 4 года назад +9

      Yes, they were mostly very young. However, there seem to have been exceptions. Just been reading "The Great Escape" by Paul Brickhill (author of "The Dam Busters"). Brickhill himself was a prisoner in the camp involved (Stalag Luft III ) which was an air force POW camp. Like I say, mostly very young, but there were at least a couple of older guys, even one as old as 50. (He'd lied about his age!).

    • @uxpjsxu
      @uxpjsxu 4 года назад +47

      What's amazing is they can actually form sentences without using four letter words unlike the idiot youth of today......

    • @weisswurster
      @weisswurster 4 года назад +42

      @@uxpjsxu that's a bit of a blanket statement. I know a lot of incredibly bright youth.

    • @ajaxmaintenance5104
      @ajaxmaintenance5104 4 года назад +6

      I had the honour of knowing 2 of those young men, one of whom was the Wireless Operator in various bombers in the RCAF. The one he seemed to mention flying in most often was the B-24, which he called “the Lib”. He was very quiet, never talked much about the war, but when I joined the Canadian Forces he seemed to talk a bit more.

  • @vajeye-nar6172
    @vajeye-nar6172 7 лет назад +657

    the plane needed big wings and multi propellers just to carry these guys testicals. True story

    • @jontymarsh0463
      @jontymarsh0463 6 лет назад +1

      Maybe for the Yanks

    • @jontymarsh0463
      @jontymarsh0463 6 лет назад

      im not a yank

    • @71Splinter
      @71Splinter 5 лет назад +8

      @CA Babyboomer both are scary, but imagine trying to bail out of a aircraft blind at night .. terrifying brave sods

    • @vincentlantz4713
      @vincentlantz4713 5 лет назад +7

      @CA Babyboomer the British started there bombing campaign with daytime air raids, but RAF bombers incurred massive losses, so the british switched to night time bombing... when the US entered the war the US Airmen figured they could do what the RAF could not: bomb during the day without incurring prohibitive losses.

    • @71Splinter
      @71Splinter 5 лет назад +5

      @CA Babyboomer My grandad was an RAF bomber pilot, also survived the war and I got to hear his stories from his mouth, truly amazing

  • @Hraesvelgr44
    @Hraesvelgr44 4 года назад +72

    They sound so calm, and just joke around whilst flak is sprinkling their lower hulls, and in icy black conditions. What incredible people

  • @Synystr7
    @Synystr7 6 лет назад +154

    It took 3 minutes and 39 seconds for the first "Good show." to happen.

    • @markhugo8270
      @markhugo8270 4 года назад +8

      I just got to this comment and heard the Good Show. Mavelous.

  • @destinjohnny007
    @destinjohnny007 4 года назад +60

    Much respect from Alabama!
    We love the uk!!

    • @Temerald51
      @Temerald51 4 года назад +9

      Thanks mate! Respect to you guys in the States from the UK! My relatuve was a rear gunner on a Lancaster but was killed in action in 1943. These men were so brave that i dont think it can be replicated today. We all owe them and everyone else who fought our lives. Lest we forget

    • @stefanwalker3810
      @stefanwalker3810 3 года назад +6

      @@Temerald51 Totally agree... all brave young men👍....British, commonwealth and American! 🇺🇸 🇬🇧. We salute you all!

    • @Temerald51
      @Temerald51 3 года назад +5

      @@stefanwalker3810 And we salute you back! I'm a serving member of the British military and I'm proud of what all our nations did together to repel the threat!

    • @Adrian-jk4kx
      @Adrian-jk4kx 2 года назад

      You too.

    • @davidjose9808
      @davidjose9808 10 месяцев назад

      Respect also to Canadians, S Africans, Rhodesians, Indians, Aussies and Kiwis who fought for freedom! God Bless them all…from a humble and grateful Texan

  • @biggles1483
    @biggles1483 9 лет назад +380

    1:33 "UUUhhhh I could do with a pint"

    • @rowgli
      @rowgli 7 лет назад +23

      Biggles Wish I could get him one.

    • @Toolpusher
      @Toolpusher 7 лет назад +8

      And a bloody stiff chaser. A very large one.

    • @joshuagallantree6721
      @joshuagallantree6721 7 лет назад +3

      Truly British

    • @chaplainjamesthicc305
      @chaplainjamesthicc305 7 лет назад +29

      Hope he got his pint, sure ass hell deserved one.

    • @EdwardHester3615
      @EdwardHester3615 7 лет назад

      Jens Nobel dude, what good did it do anyone? England is weecked, Germany is wrecked, western civilization is wrecked...why did we fight Germany?

  • @alexmattin4177
    @alexmattin4177 4 года назад +238

    This gives me goosebumps. My father was a Lancaster pilot on 101 squadron towards the end of the war and flew 15 of these sorties. He never talked about it unless you asked him. RIP Reg Mattin, always my hero

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 2 года назад +22

      Oh Alex, did you know that 101 sqn was Special?
      101 sqn usually carried an extra crew member. Who operated weird machinery not really explained to rest of crew.
      His job was to listen in to German wireless and block the transmissions. Some say the equipment actually made 101 Lancs an easier target.
      There are stories of these 8th men getting on the radio and giving overriding instructions. Telling German fightets to return to base, etc, in German.
      The 8th man could often speak German, was often Jewish, though many hid their religion and claimed to be C of E, because they knew they were in huge trouble if the plane was shot down. And, sadly there were anti Jewish people right through the Commonwealth, on the Allies side, too. Not wanting Jews dead, but still not nice to Jews.
      The normal crew were discouraged from partying and hanging out with the new 8th man, because the less they knew, the less they could tell, if caught. So it was a pretty sad existence for man 8 - but the 8th men in the Sqn, hung out.
      One really fascinating source for you to check, is in THE JEWISH VIRTUAL LIBRARY, and type in 101 Squadron.
      Lots of amazing stories and explanations of what 101 sqn did.
      I am a WW2 researcher, total relaxed atheist. No hidden agenda. Really interesting and rarer to come across info to be found there.
      Good luck with your new research!

    • @bergeracvandamme
      @bergeracvandamme Год назад

      Then your dad was a legend. Huge respect.

    • @lynnrogers2980
      @lynnrogers2980 10 месяцев назад +5

      These tapes and the vids should be played in schools and univercities in England to show this entitled generation where there good lives came from,🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @MaSoNGaMeR115
      @MaSoNGaMeR115 9 месяцев назад

      hard to workout an exact number but can you take a guess at how many women and children he killed?

    • @MaSoNGaMeR115
      @MaSoNGaMeR115 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@lynnrogers2980 what does this have to do with african and asian chidren? the men in the video are english and english children are already a minority in england, hardly a good life going into extinction in your own homeland

  • @BramsCommando
    @BramsCommando 4 года назад +114

    "How many searchlights you see?"
    "Couple of thousands"
    Something you can't imagine if you haven't seen it

    • @Red_Beard2798
      @Red_Beard2798 4 года назад

      I imagine this is late war given the scale of units being used so I ask; how useful would the searchlights be in an already fairly bombed out city i.e Dresden, Berlin what with the smog, smoke and fire already clouding the skies?

    • @andysatch9150
      @andysatch9150 3 года назад

      3:25

    • @graham2631
      @graham2631 3 года назад

      @@Red_Beard2798 one would find you then another and another then comes the guns then they look for another

  • @robynn144
    @robynn144 7 лет назад +272

    Pilot: "Where is he[enemy nightfighter], rear gunner. an you see him?" (sound of machine guns firing) Rear gunner: "Down, down..he's come down! Pilot: "Did you shoot him down?" Rear gunner: "Yeah...! " The entire crew cheers in triumph. Pilot: "Okay, don't shout all at once!"

    • @donnyjohn7000
      @donnyjohn7000 5 лет назад

      The gunner said 'He's GONE down.. he's going down!'

    • @eleventhousandpenguins6198
      @eleventhousandpenguins6198 5 лет назад +2

      well im sure you wouldn't be very sain if you were under that pressure and fear.

    • @petesmith9472
      @petesmith9472 5 лет назад

      Australian crew

    • @placidrenegade
      @placidrenegade 5 лет назад +1

      robynn He's got him boy!....Right in the middle!

    • @petesmith9472
      @petesmith9472 4 года назад +3

      @washington gibz . Here are the facts: Air Vice Marshal (AVM) E. H. Stephenson AO OBE Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), ex 207 Squadron RAF, identifies the pilot as Flight Lieutenant (Flt Lt) Ken Letford, and the Navigator "Conn" as Warrant Officer H. Connelly RAAF. The 207 Squadron RAF Association in England identify the remainder of the crew as Sergeant (Sgt). C. Stewart, Flight Engineer; Flt Lt W. Bray, Bomb Aimer; Sgt W. Sparks, Wireless Operator; Flying Officer J. Fieldhouse, Mid-Upper Air-Gunner; Sgt. H. Devenish, Rear Air-Gunner, all RAF.

  • @superkjell
    @superkjell 4 года назад +39

    The inscription on the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in London says: "Freedom is the sure possession of those alone who have the courage to defend it."

  • @kevinchappell3694
    @kevinchappell3694 4 года назад +144

    My uncle’s Halifax was shot up on his last raid. He remembers jamming in the hatch trying to parachute out. The Hally apparently blow up and threw him clear. Half the crew died. Spent a year and a half in as a POW. Spent the rest of his life waking up screaming at night.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 4 года назад +9

      What Base did he fly from? and what Squadron. My half brother, based at North Creake, died on his last flight, 3/5/1945. Sqdn .199, 100 Group.

    • @rusty1415
      @rusty1415 3 года назад +2

      My great uncle was the sole survivor in his B26. He was wounded in the face and arms, and was captured by the Jerries as he parachuted down. He spent a year in Stalag Luft III.

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 2 года назад

      ​@@rusty1415 What year? 1944?
      Would you share his name? Or just date shot down? Sorry. Yt never told me you replied.
      Havr you contacted the sqn Association and asked if there are any stories in their records that mention him, or if they have any records to show you, that concern him?

    • @rusty1415
      @rusty1415 2 года назад +3

      @@georgielancaster1356 Jay Troup, was shot down Dec. 23rd 1944. I researched the family story some more, and found that there was one other survivor.

    • @uhtred7860
      @uhtred7860 Год назад +8

      My old history teacher here in NZ during the 80s was a Lancaster and later Mosquito pilot, if we had a double history lesson that was boring we would get him talking about his flying in WW2. He would tell it like it was, the losses the injuries to crew, what the targets looked like, everything.

  • @Heraldmessenger
    @Heraldmessenger 8 лет назад +124

    "think we've been hit...personnely ".. ."How many search lights down there?"...."Too many!"...... brave men .

  • @placidrenegade
    @placidrenegade 8 лет назад +752

    The average age of a Lancaster bomber crew was 22 years old. We will remember them.

    • @placidrenegade
      @placidrenegade 8 лет назад +31

      8.325 aircraft lost during ww2

    • @jackbauer9746
      @jackbauer9746 6 лет назад +8

      Thats not an average, its a range.

    • @sebathadah1559
      @sebathadah1559 6 лет назад +4

      placid renegade really puts it into perspective....compared to today.

    • @jesuschristneverlived6938
      @jesuschristneverlived6938 6 лет назад +32

      +placid renegade
      Damn, I turned 19 years old yesterday. Most people my age need safe spaces. No safe space at 40,000ft with every gun in occupied France/Germany pointed at you!!!

    • @johnaggett1712
      @johnaggett1712 6 лет назад +12

      Without the help from our friends across the pond and others, the job would have been tougher.Thank you all.

  • @hazbutler
    @hazbutler 8 лет назад +180

    2:19 you can hear what is probably flak pinging off the windshield

    • @vapormissile
      @vapormissile 8 лет назад +36

      l hear it, and they say "That was a bit close," so l'm wondering if that was the flak shell going off. The recording doesn't have any bass. Either way, thanks for noticing!

    • @mgytitanic1912
      @mgytitanic1912 7 лет назад +31

      I just love the comment after "That was a bit close"

    • @otterspocket2826
      @otterspocket2826 7 лет назад +25

      It wasn't the sound of the flak shell exploding, it was a piece of shrapnel from it hitting the aircraft. Probably the piece that caused the damage to the front turret which the bomb-aimer, whose secondary role was front gunner, reported when he returned to that position.

    • @Pluggit1953
      @Pluggit1953 7 лет назад +2

      hazbutler flak*

    • @jrcrawford4
      @jrcrawford4 6 лет назад

      I think we've been hit, personally.

  • @shingerz
    @shingerz 10 месяцев назад +11

    Such brave men 56.000 never returned so unbelievable,they will never be forgotten not in my book thankyou 🇬🇧🇬🇧

  • @mrhammers78
    @mrhammers78 8 лет назад +169

    absolute bloody legends...they shall not grow old...

    • @paulgray9084
      @paulgray9084 5 лет назад +3

      @@rickywood2369 And a much poorer place without them!

    • @jezdye3615
      @jezdye3615 4 года назад +1

      @@mesaverde2042 Cock end!

  • @Soulmusic357
    @Soulmusic357 4 года назад +28

    "Could do with a pint" brilliant. Good lads. We will never forget ♥

  • @spidermike3
    @spidermike3 5 лет назад +347

    This should be play to school kids, need more of british history taught in schools

    • @albundy9597
      @albundy9597 4 года назад +6

      Be careful about that, Britain in the past has invaded more countries than any other country (google it) and stolen their wealth at the point of a bayonet only to talk about freedom and democracy today. Patriotism is a sin covering up the feelings of humanity that screams no.

    • @Nickmariners
      @Nickmariners 4 года назад +56

      @@albundy9597 Bundy -- you are either a fool or a troll, with no balance or perspective to your asinine opinion. Without men like this, you simply wouldn't exist -- or you would be talking German and goose-stepping around. Although -- virtue-signallers like you would not have thrived under Nazi rule.

    • @albundy9597
      @albundy9597 4 года назад +4

      @@Nickmariners I do speak German fluently but that is beside the point, this stupid generalisation gets on my nerves, did the germans force people to learn German in the occupied countries? no.

    • @albundy9597
      @albundy9597 4 года назад +6

      @Ric O’shea I'm not saying that resisting aggression is wrong, especially in the case of Hitler but take the blindfolds off, we were just as bad in our past as any country, glorifying war is rather stupid and I'm sure that anybody who has been forced to take part would be horrified by it. My father fought in the navy in WW2 the full 6 years, when he came home he threw all his medals on the fire. The government then had the temerity to call him up for the Korean war, he told them to stuff it and would rather go to prison, they left him alone.

    • @albundy9597
      @albundy9597 4 года назад +5

      @Ric O’shea No need to apologize, I don't get insulted, opinions are only the sum total of our concepts that we have been indoctrinated with throughout our lives.Anger is, it arises but for no one, presence will observe it but there is nobody that hears it.
      I lived and worked in Germany for 40 years, had a wonderful time, I found them no different to any other people that I have met.
      I now live in Thailand, are they any different? no, their concepts are are different but they love their children as we do, they worry about money and the future as we do, no need to go and bomb them because our government says we should.
      The men of the RAF and the Americans had tremendous courage and suffered heavy losses to go and do a despicable job that they were told needed to be done.
      I read an account of an American airman who had to bail out of his bomber 50 km away from the city that he had just bombed. He was captured and on his way by train which had to stop in that same city he saw rows of children being led by a nurse, their faces heavily bandaged, he asked what was wrong with them and was told they had been blinded by phosphorous bombs, he was racked by guilt and wanted to sink into the earth. Was he to blame? no, it was just what is, all part of the play of life, but his life was turned upside down, now he didn't feel heroic or that what he had done was worthwhile, it is as it is, but the feeling of shame never left him his whole life.

  • @-CT7567-
    @-CT7567- 9 месяцев назад +18

    5:53 has me dying😭
    “There go the cookies!”
    “Lookie lookie lookie!”
    “There go the incendiaries”
    “And there goes my bottle!”
    And then shortly later:
    “Oh I think they’re firing at us”

    • @AcePilotX2
      @AcePilotX2 9 месяцев назад +2

      Cookie was the name of the bomb

    • @sambishop8853
      @sambishop8853 7 месяцев назад +2

      There goes my bottle had me cracked up tbf 😂

  • @peterkeane7767
    @peterkeane7767 4 года назад +76

    I remember meeting one of these Men when we were both Volunteers at Cosford Museum in the 80's.
    A great Chap and always cheerful and helpful,especially for new to the role Old Erks like me!
    Sat in the Canteen,we were having a 'pull up a Sandbag,and tell us your tale' session and I said I could never understand how it must have been to have to go to the full fury of Total War,never knowing if you would be killed or wounded.Often have to watch Friends and Colleagues die or go down in the most traumatic of Circumstances,as well as carry out Missions that you knew took that same Total War to others. Then if you got back,grab what food,Kip R and R etc. You could knowing that as soon as possible you would have to leave the relative Safety of your base and Go back and do it all over again,Night after Night often for Weeks, even Months at a time!
    I told him that I thought they showed incredible fortitude and stamina and that I had never felt any kind of certainty I could have completed such a tour.
    He told me that the thing was you became very close to your Crewmates and kept yourselves to yourselves as a Crew, They became much more to you than other 'Significant other's' and as the Tour progressed you became increasingly invested in both your Crewmates and your Aircraft to see you through to the end of your Tour. All kinds of rituals and 'lucky' Charms were seriously observed,but your greatest assett and the thing you put your faith in to see you through it alive was your Crewmates!
    It was on his run up to his last mission of his ( I believe 2nd Tour) that he developed an Ear infection that caused him obvious pain and he was sent to the M.O. as nobody wanted a distracted Rear Gunner on a Lanc over Germany!
    When he saw the M.O. he was devastated to be told that
    A) He was 'Grounded' as Medically unfit for Ops, and B) It was not a problem,as due to the obvious near defeat of the Reich,there was a pool of qualified Officers who were wanting to get some 'Combat Hours' logged to ensure their prospects 'post War'!
    His devastation at this was still palpable best part of 50 years later,and he told of how he had done everything short of boarding the Aircraft at Pistol point to be with his "Crew" and Aircraft on this of all Missions and the thought of being left behind and having to fly his last Mission alone with strangers,maybe in a strange plane was just bloody awful,
    The worst was still to come 'His' Lancaster was shot down and all his Crew were lost.
    50 years later he still lived with the loss and Torment of Surviving,when he should have been with his Crew at his Station,Making sure they were safe.
    The pain this Man had carried all through the rest of his adult life and the cost his Service had imposed upon him was profoundly humbling to try to contemplate and my appreciation of what these relatively very young Men went through was increased Tenfold. Ordinary People who found themselves faced with extraordinary responsibilities and met Fear and Ehaustion with sheer Guts and determination.
    Even Hero doesn't even begin to describe them.

    • @concise707
      @concise707 4 года назад +5

      The now well hackneyed phrase 'band of brothers' doesn't cover a fraction of the camaraderie and devotion a crew developed during a Tour with BC.....

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 2 года назад +2

      Beautifully told in his memory.
      I wish I had met him.
      There were many similar stories. Many stories of new young crews turning up, excited, wanting tips, often hadn't even unpacked, off they go, never return.
      The first 5 I think the most dangerous, and then the last 2...
      Haunting.

  • @budgienation
    @budgienation 8 лет назад +311

    Ah, that unflappable calm. "Hello, engineer, this is Skipper here, be a good lad and put the kettle on, would you? There' a good lad." And who could forget 'Lookie, lookie, lookie, there go the cookies''. Man, they don't make 'em like that anymore.

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 7 лет назад +3

      I also liked the part about 'there goes my bottle.' If I understand it correctly, they would drop their used bottles with the bombs because some believed it made a whistling sound and would scare the Germans.

    • @24819984
      @24819984 7 лет назад +19

      TheCanadiangirl4 .....bottles were available for the crew to relieve themselves in as in cabin latrines we're not available 😃 So when he sends his bottles, it's a "present or gift" to Jerry!!!

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 7 лет назад +7

      lol. I actually did know they used the bottles that way, I just didn't want to say it. I read a book written by a RCAF Bomber Command pilot who mentioned doing that over Germany. :)

    • @up0the0ions
      @up0the0ions 7 лет назад +1

      Steve Gyetko cookie meaning a huge bomb

    • @infledermaus
      @infledermaus 6 лет назад

      Steve Gyetko I'll have to have another listen. I thought he said "put the throttles up" indicating he needed a little more speed to stay level on the bomb run.

  • @idunno512
    @idunno512 7 лет назад +373

    "Could do with a pint" typical Brit 😂

    • @Irishandtired
      @Irishandtired 6 лет назад +7

      Anyone can be a Brit today.

    • @johnaggett1712
      @johnaggett1712 6 лет назад +16

      Irishandtired yes,but not a true Brit!

    • @Skankhunt-mt5dy
      @Skankhunt-mt5dy 6 лет назад +26

      Anyone who speaks English,obeys the British law and practice British traditions. I'm a proud American who sees Europe the builders of my great nation. God Save The Queen.

    • @NiSiochainGanSaoirse
      @NiSiochainGanSaoirse 4 года назад +3

      But we do t drink that much anymore since the pub trade was murdered by e.u wankers.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron 4 года назад +11

      @@Skankhunt-mt5dy what a wonderful comment and we'll received, our American cousins are far more than mere allies.

  • @lpd1snipe
    @lpd1snipe Год назад +59

    I only wish I could give this a thumbs up every time I watch it. My uncle was on the a
    Arizona and he is still there, entombed forever. God bless these brave men.

    • @nzfreeski
      @nzfreeski 9 месяцев назад +1

      immortalized, the brave of the brave.

  • @chroniclesofbap6170
    @chroniclesofbap6170 4 года назад +400

    I'm ashamed at what we are doing to the country that they fought for.

    • @FinFett
      @FinFett 4 года назад +35

      @anonymous one racism under a WW2 video pogchamp

    • @FinFett
      @FinFett 4 года назад +33

      @anonymous one well then why are you saying "migrate to england" as if tens of thousands of muslims don't already live here? don't try to bend this round, you know you're being a piece of shit

    • @danielwhyatt3278
      @danielwhyatt3278 4 года назад +20

      Yeah, I’m pretty sure we are spitting in the face of everything they fought for in one way or another. I mean, I can only imagine what they really thought the future of Britain would be 75 years on. It was probably a lot more beautiful than the reality.

    • @crackajacka87
      @crackajacka87 4 года назад +20

      The definition of racism is,
      prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against a person or people on the basis of their membership of a particular racial or ethnic group, typically one that is a minority or marginalized.
      Muslims are considered an ethnic group and these people fought for our freedom and the freedom of people... What you are demonstrating is what we fought against, tyranny and racism of the Nazi party. Only difference is the Nazi's hated Jews while you hate on Muslims. In other words, you are a problem that needs to be dealt with.

    • @chroniclesofbap6170
      @chroniclesofbap6170 4 года назад +6

      @@crackajacka87 Racism is prejudice by race, not religion.
      In fact Section 29J of the Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 states:
      29JProtection of freedom of expression
      Nothing in this Part shall be read or given effect in a way which prohibits or restricts discussion, criticism or expressions of antipathy, dislike, ridicule, insult or abuse of particular religions or the beliefs or practices of their adherents, or of any other belief system or the beliefs or practices of its adherents, or proselytising or urging adherents of a different religion or belief system to cease practising their religion or belief system.

  • @pauljohnson7may
    @pauljohnson7may 4 года назад +230

    I had tears in my eyes listening to this, these were not supermen they were young men who knew they were dancing with death, just like everyone who has put their lives on the line for others.
    It takes an exceptional kind of spirit to do do that time and time again to the end, day or night.

    • @oldtimer5283
      @oldtimer5283 4 года назад +9

      They were proud to be British. And fought and died as proud British men..may your god always be your wingman.

    • @Boatperson
      @Boatperson 4 года назад +9

      Such young men who sound mature way beyond their years! Loved the excitement when the mid gunner hit one....

    • @MegaLJ3
      @MegaLJ3 4 года назад +8

      I too became teary eyed and started to reflect on what these men and women did for freedoms.

    • @kohedunn
      @kohedunn 3 года назад +9

      Life was different then ... Very different... Young men were expected to behave like their fathers.. being an adult meant just that..

    • @alexm7627
      @alexm7627 3 года назад +3

      The most exceptional is Jesus because of what he did, giving his life, not just for those who love him but even for those who hated him

  • @bmused55
    @bmused55 7 лет назад +74

    The greatest generation. Called up to defend home and land and charged gallantly into the night knowing they stood a high chance of dying. Men of solid steel with balls the size of a house.

  • @countrywideboy
    @countrywideboy 4 года назад +22

    'F' for Freddie, flown by flt Ken Letford out of RAF Langar, 1943 207 SQD ,..... Essen 3/4 April,10 detailed 10 returned Strettin 20/21,8 detailed 8 returned, April,Berlin 3/4 April, 11 detailed 10 back 1 failed to return.
    LEST WE FORGET.

    • @CanWeGetMuchHigher667
      @CanWeGetMuchHigher667 9 месяцев назад

      F

    • @john3889
      @john3889 8 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/qtKTvCikdLc/видео.htmlsi=GNCD_Pi0bo2O6Lee
      F for Freddie mentioned at minute 17

  • @AdaptableTeacher2020
    @AdaptableTeacher2020 4 года назад +48

    "Hello Skipper."
    "Hello."
    "We've been holed in the front here. Oil's leaking out of the front turret so it's nothing to worry about."

  • @panchh9228
    @panchh9228 6 лет назад +34

    "dont talk all at once" as they are in the middle of a dogfight., my god you dont have men like this anymore!

  • @gcfcos
    @gcfcos 9 лет назад +485

    Brave beyond all comprehension. Freezing cold and miles away from home night after night for up to 12 hours at a time I'm told knowing in all likelihood they'll never come back. They never even told each other that they were nervous or scared they just kept it to themselves. This generation won't ever know the hardness of these men. My grandad was in agony with cancer but never heard him utter a single word of complaint.

    • @Toolpusher
      @Toolpusher 7 лет назад +10

      Well said.

    • @growlanser5600
      @growlanser5600 7 лет назад +6

      Johannes Liechtenauer The quality of Western soldiers nowadays isn't as good. Very few in the West have the "die for my country mindset". Meanwhile China's soldiers are ready to die for their country, same with North Korea and Russia.

    • @growlanser5600
      @growlanser5600 7 лет назад +1

      AIC SKS They do it for the money.

    • @nemui_tora
      @nemui_tora 7 лет назад +16

      Trying having a "die for my country" attitude as a soldier after taking a look at modern colleges. Then take a look at riots that form from wanting historical statues taken down. Then look at what people think of you if you have the wrong political opinion. ect.
      I did my time in service. It's a experience I'll never forget. I joined up 2003 obviously motivated from the actions of 9/11. The country was different then, the country was angry but united. Now it's just soft children.
      Western civilization has reached a point where the quality of life is so good that people create things to be outraged about.. to give them a purpose. I'd never fight for this country again the way it is now.

    • @pittsburghpirate58
      @pittsburghpirate58 7 лет назад +11

      Skyslimit86 Nazis in America are the enemy and those Brits in the bombers if they were alive today would beat the living daylights out any Nazis!!!

  • @allanhughes7859
    @allanhughes7859 4 года назад +16

    How brave!! Really how brave !!!!So to all those Cheats, Thieves , that exsist today stand back and take a look at what these individuals have given you and look at what you are doing !!!!
    For all those that think times are hard and the world owes them something take a look at what these undividuals have given you. To those that think war is a crime which it probably is
    just think of what these individuals have given you ... For all those that think we need not spend on self defence just look at what they gave you.. To those that don't want to
    look or listen just think what they gave... For those that ignore history you are the worst enemy for history will reapeat itself as it does on a daily weekly monthly yearly bassis ...
    These young men and women gave you what you have now It might not be ideal but it is better than it would have been ..Wthout their courage god only knows where we would be today !!!
    I can't stress how much I admire what they did and their courage in doing so "THANK YOU FROM THE BOTOM OF MY HEART" !!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @anfo_4241
    @anfo_4241 6 лет назад +61

    "Hello, mid gunner?", such formaility

    • @paulb6716
      @paulb6716 4 года назад +12

      Couldn't see each other so it makes sure the right man hears the instruction.

  • @connorvaughn7968
    @connorvaughn7968 7 лет назад +14

    "They're firing at us now." "are they?" "Yeah." Sounds like these guys gave NO fucks......
    "Oy, we've got a hole in the front here. Its nothing to worry about." . "Okay."

  • @filmic1
    @filmic1 7 лет назад +57

    Cool as a cucumber and no wasted energy/drama on unnecessary expletive deletives.

  • @Goalie002
    @Goalie002 3 года назад +116

    "Yeah they're searching for us, bastards"
    "Oh hell..."
    "Certainly illuminates things doesn't it?"
    "Sure does...I could do with a pint"
    Flying over enemy territory at night, hundreds of miles from home, German searchlights lighting up the sky and his only thought it having a beer. Top class.

    • @jasonhunt19201
      @jasonhunt19201 2 года назад +2

      bit sad innet

    • @minchmoorramblers6856
      @minchmoorramblers6856 2 года назад +5

      Heroes those Lancaster crews. To know you may never come home each time. Scary.

    • @derpythespy
      @derpythespy 2 года назад +7

      1:18 in case y’all wanna hear

    • @randybackgammon890
      @randybackgammon890 2 года назад +1

      @@minchmoorramblers6856 And no four letter words in the jaws of death.....remarkable
      ...

    • @davepowell1661
      @davepowell1661 2 года назад

      Wacko ,Norks alert!

  • @ChrisPuddy
    @ChrisPuddy 8 лет назад +351

    Very sobering. What a different world and people there was then. Imagine the language nowadays.

    • @msheehandub
      @msheehandub 7 лет назад +12

      Chris Puddy Just watch any modern war movie. US soldiers are rarely gentlemen. Instead they are low income people looking for a stable career. Gang members, Hicks, inbeciles...poor bastards.

    • @Scumbagius
      @Scumbagius 7 лет назад +12

      Dr. Rico lies

    • @danielhunter34
      @danielhunter34 7 лет назад +5

      Chris Puddy yes britistanish

    • @crazymotionride
      @crazymotionride 7 лет назад +11

      It would just be arguing about what pronouns to use for each other.

    • @msheehandub
      @msheehandub 7 лет назад +4

      J Burke excuse me did my finger slip from M to N back there? Oh I'm dearly sorry for that. My ignorance is now on the whole internet for everyone to see. Please forgive me dear sir!

  • @BunnyUK
    @BunnyUK 7 лет назад +38

    legendary British discipline.

    • @dulls8475
      @dulls8475 4 года назад +1

      plus a couple of Aussies i think.

  • @peter_piper
    @peter_piper 4 года назад +31

    Amazing to listen to real History as it happened ... big Respect.

  • @08Barclay
    @08Barclay 2 года назад +159

    My cousin P.O. A.E. West, was an RCAF rear gunner attached to 57 Squadron RAF flying out of East Kirkby in July 1944. He was fatally injured in 3 night fighter attacks over Stuttgart , July 29th. He lived through the 4.5 hr return trip to England badly shot up, but died enroute from the base hospital to a civilian hospital. The rest of his crew survived , with only a minor injury to the mid upper gunner . A.E West “young Bert” was a couple of weeks past his 20th birthday. He was a Vancouver BC Canadian boy, and is buried in Brookwoods cemetery near Woking England. I visited his grave in 2006, and shall always remember the neatly kept rows upon rows of the graves of very young men who gave their all. Rest In Peace my friends, we shall never forget you!

    • @daemonharper3928
      @daemonharper3928 10 месяцев назад +3

      We live 4 miles from East Kirkby - there's normally a South East wind here and we regularly hear the Lancaster revving it's engines.

    • @allanpickering6939
      @allanpickering6939 10 месяцев назад +2

      Hi my dad was a radio operator on 57 squadron out of East Kirkby at first he was with 9 squadron at another air field but his pilot was killed so they transferred him to 57 squadron and I think he was there about the time your cousin was I have his flight log so I will have to check. He did 31 ops over Germany and France 8times to Berlin badly shot up by night fighters lost the bomb bay and one engine just made it back.

    • @TakaAmun
      @TakaAmun 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@Lars89221 With all the bridges out there, there was bound to be a Troll under one of them... And there you are 🤨

    • @hubristicmystic
      @hubristicmystic 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@Lars89221 Did the Dutch defeat the Na zis? Oh no, that was the British and Americans. You're very welcome.

    • @curt3494
      @curt3494 10 месяцев назад +1

      RIP

  • @myke.h2913
    @myke.h2913 6 лет назад +52

    My utmost respect for those brave RAF lancaster crews.

  • @cjgangi0123
    @cjgangi0123 9 лет назад +267

    They sound so so calm.

    • @weandyrfc7
      @weandyrfc7 9 лет назад +41

      +CJ Gangi You had to be back then to stay sane. No idea how people back then could do this stuff, guess they had no choice seeing as their very existence was at risk.

    • @RADIOACTIVEBUNY
      @RADIOACTIVEBUNY 8 лет назад +30

      +CJ Gangi Pilots are known to be among the calmest people on (or above) Earth under stress. And British people are known for that as well, pilot or not. Put them together and you get this, lol.

    • @douglasjackson5664
      @douglasjackson5664 7 лет назад

      RADIOACTIVE BUNNY

    • @douglasjackson5664
      @douglasjackson5664 7 лет назад

      RADIOACTIVE BUNNY

    • @dingusmcgee3230
      @dingusmcgee3230 7 лет назад +2

      douglas jackson r/oldpeoplefacebook

  • @nashfunk389
    @nashfunk389 4 года назад +20

    02:41 - "Hello skipper" - Yes - "We've been holed in the front here....Oil leaking out...nothing to worry about"..... - Absolute balls of steel these chaps!

  • @matthewharper8986
    @matthewharper8986 2 года назад +36

    Courageous, dignified, calm and composed. Heroic young men all. I did get a real chill when that skipper said, "My God, I've never seen anything like this before..." I can only imagine how terrifying it must have been for these lads. But they remained professional throughout. Just incredible fortitude.

  • @Quaidy10
    @Quaidy10 5 лет назад +150

    2:10
    “If we press on a bit this way we might get out.”
    “Yeah.”
    The voices of men resigned to the fact they’re not likely to survive the night.

    • @TealJosh
      @TealJosh 4 года назад +4

      I can't even imagine what it's like to fly in flak protected hostile airspace. Search light finds you and the flak gets really close. Flashes of light and metal clanks and rings as shrapnel strike the hull.

    • @ericscaillet2232
      @ericscaillet2232 4 года назад +6

      @@TealJosh and a hull as thin as paper. ...

    • @Sarconthewolf
      @Sarconthewolf 4 года назад +9

      @@ericscaillet2232 Your right. Took a ride in a B-24 Liberator and the sheet metal is paper thin almost. No walls on the inside to save weight. Amazing amount of bravery to get into those planes, not knowing if you'll survive or not.

    • @alansmyth2204
      @alansmyth2204 4 года назад +1

      Absolutely right

  • @JS-go5nd
    @JS-go5nd 4 года назад +72

    My Grandad was a tail gunner for a Lancaster bomber and also Wellington during the war, flew flights numerous flights over Germany, I remember bringing ww2 plane books to read with him and he still knew how to identify all the aircraft from both sides. Such a legend and someone I deeply miss always

  • @TheWTFworks
    @TheWTFworks 9 лет назад +305

    There goes the cookie...
    Im done xD

    • @thesayxx
      @thesayxx 9 лет назад +62

      TheWTFworks The "cookie" was a 4000 lb bomb, the RAF useed.

    • @biggles1483
      @biggles1483 9 лет назад +27

      "Looky looky looky!"

    • @TheFyresai
      @TheFyresai 7 лет назад +12

      There goes my bottle...

    • @davidayarra3129
      @davidayarra3129 7 лет назад +1

      TheFyresai i cant tell if he said bottle or throttle

    • @dungspreader
      @dungspreader 7 лет назад +20

      TheFyresai . A bottle of pee . Lancasters had only one pilot and he couldn't leave his post , so he'd piss in a bottle or jam jar and it would be dropped with the bombs .

  • @Hunwutzzzz
    @Hunwutzzzz 2 года назад +121

    I'm german, but I can share the relieved emotions of the crew, when their tail gunner shot down the destroyer 9:00. Yet I hope the german pilot did survive

    • @DarkVoidDan
      @DarkVoidDan 10 месяцев назад +10

      I'm English/German I have admiration for both sides my grandparents were fighting each other then they get married soon after lol.

    • @esobed1
      @esobed1 10 месяцев назад +19

      All nations have done bad historically. The Germans with Nazism, The British and French with Colonialism, we Americans with Slavery/Racism and the Military Industrial Complex.
      Individuals must learn from these mistakes our parents made as to not repeat them. Honor to all our ancestors.

    • @Cal-Corgan
      @Cal-Corgan 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@esobed1 Well, look at it this way: if it weren't for colonialism, neither you nor any of your countrymen would even be here today, and without the US things in Europe would have taken a very ugly turn.
      Things have a way of working out.

    • @esobed1
      @esobed1 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@Cal-Corgan I wouldn't be here... but I (or some DNA variant) would be "there", wherever "there" was. I say this to dispute that this may be the best outcomes that we know. Other outcomes could have been better.
      What if China became a Democracy after WW2?
      What if the Russian Federation was integrated into the EU and NATO in the 1990?
      What if there was a true effort to a two-state solution in Palestine/Israel back in the 1990s... Or the 1940s?
      It could have been better but we have to work with what we got.

    • @Cal-Corgan
      @Cal-Corgan 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@esobed1 Yup. That's why I don't believe in fate. What happens now is dictated by a decision you made in the past. It's done. No alternative is possible.

  • @unitedstatesdale
    @unitedstatesdale 7 лет назад +27

    Half the wings gone skipper , Ok, She will get us back..good show lads.....
    THESE WERE REAL MEN...
    REAL HARD CORE BRAVERY

  • @davidmarshall1259
    @davidmarshall1259 8 лет назад +481

    I recognise a couple of Yorkshire accents in there!!

    • @chrisclayton1979
      @chrisclayton1979 7 лет назад +22

      DAVID Marshall yep . I recon huddersfield and hull or east Riding area . this video is fasanating . there is 3 London . 1 high class . 1 low . 1 mid

    • @clairewilliams3226
      @clairewilliams3226 7 лет назад +14

      Deffo Yorkshire :)

    • @themuseicman
      @themuseicman 7 лет назад +27

      chris clayton all depending on each other to survive as well. No class differences when getting shot at or trying to find home base in January at night covered in fog. Must have felt a lot of camaraderie.

    • @AdhocHoopla
      @AdhocHoopla 7 лет назад +13

      I was about to say that. Bless their souls.

    • @zipstermorris8055
      @zipstermorris8055 7 лет назад +11

      DAVID Marshall I say there's definitely a Huddersfield going towards Barnsley, accent in there maybe a Wakey one.

  • @karlnelson7550
    @karlnelson7550 6 лет назад +28

    9:39 "It's burning don't he look lovely" 👍👏

    • @johnmiles2537
      @johnmiles2537 4 года назад

      I love that comment - proper English wit👍

  • @LiffeyKing
    @LiffeyKing 3 месяца назад +4

    A story I recently read from a Lancaster Squadrons history👇
    In the mid sixties my family and I were sitting in a small cafe in Spalding, Lincolnshire. Seated at another table sitting with his family was a very distinguished looking gentleman with a big handle bar moustache. My mother remarked that he kept looking at her. As he got up to leave he came over and said to mum, your Mary Wright aren't you? Mum said she was. He then said, the last time I saw you, you were in my office on a charge.
    Apparently she had been in charge of the ribbons denoting the Wing Commanders aircraft which were fixed to the wings and as she was crossing the airfield, two young airmen met her and said, bet you daren't put your stockings on the wings instead of those ribbons. She did and the gentleman now stood at our table said,
    "I didn't notice those stockings until I was over Berlin."

  • @jrcrawford4
    @jrcrawford4 6 лет назад +232

    8:38
    "Hey, Jimmy, tracers behind us...
    "Bombs jettisoned."
    "Where is he, ah, rear gunner, can you see 'im?"
    "Down! Down!"
    "Down!"
    "E's come down. He's shot down."
    "Did you shoot 'im down?"
    [All] "Yes!"
    "He's got 'im, boy, right in the [mill?]!"
    "Bloody good show--[cheers]!!!"
    "Photograph taken! Keep weaving, Skip, there's some flak coming up!"
    "OK! Don't shout all at once!"
    "Photograph taken."
    "OK, photograph taken."
    "Hello, Skipper, will you turn onto zero eight one?"
    "Alright, zero eight one, Navigator. Don't all speak at once, now -- keep quiet -- it's OK."
    "OK, Skip."
    "Ah, hello, mid-gunner, did you recognize that fighter you shot down?"
    "No, I didn't recognize it but it's definitely going down now."
    "Good, Jimmy, I can see it, boy! Good show! I can see 'im now... Burning."
    "Yeah, doesn't 'e look lovely?"
    "Good show, lads, now keep your eyes open."
    "Ok, Cap...."

    • @zaphodbeeblebrox9109
      @zaphodbeeblebrox9109 4 года назад +19

      Right in the mouth he says i think

    • @Claymore62
      @Claymore62 4 года назад +8

      Or right on the Mellon!

    • @DraftySatyr
      @DraftySatyr 4 года назад +2

      @@Claymore62 Not a phrase that would have been used at that time.

    • @captaintyrrell6428
      @captaintyrrell6428 4 года назад +21

      'Right in the middle'...

    • @MegaLJ3
      @MegaLJ3 4 года назад +6

      Yes they were brave. I'd like to know what happened to the youthful Brits where they let a foreign invasion of people take over their country and telling them where they can and can't go.

  • @paulmk2290
    @paulmk2290 4 года назад +34

    The skipper sounds so calm and in control throughout. No doubt he was as frightened and concerned as anybody would be, but you can hear what it takes to lead in those circumstances.

    • @stu1002
      @stu1002 Год назад +2

      You can imagine the other 7 boys in that aircraft trusted that man more than their own mother - and listening to that audio you can understand why.

  • @jackpinesavage1628
    @jackpinesavage1628 4 года назад +212

    Tears well up in my eyes, lump in my throat, listening to my British cousins in this recording.

    • @gregprouse1173
      @gregprouse1173 4 года назад +12

      Nice reply that....thanks Jack

    • @jezdye3615
      @jezdye3615 4 года назад +10

      Thank you Jack

    • @placidrenegade
      @placidrenegade 4 года назад +11

      And they asked nothing in return to this day.

    • @23sunderland
      @23sunderland 4 года назад +6

      Me too I knew a pilot now gone . Miss him

    • @ericscaillet2232
      @ericscaillet2232 4 года назад +4

      @@placidrenegade and that is how it is done 😏

  • @joshbelis2376
    @joshbelis2376 4 года назад +13

    We've been hit. Oil leaking out of the front turret. Nothing to worry about...legends.

    • @raflaughter3474
      @raflaughter3474 4 года назад +3

      Yep. We Brits are experts at understatements. In the Falklands the Royal Navy flew choppers to land troops. Hurricane speed winds, heavy rain and thick thick fog. Command back home asked if the flights had to be cancelled. The Task Force commander replied "No, I don't think so. If we wait any longer the conditions might get bad."

  • @lengasparini2918
    @lengasparini2918 8 лет назад +33

    Eerie and haunting. Sergeant Bertram Warr, RAF, a Toronto-born poet, went down in a Halifax bomber over Essen,
    on April 3, 1943. Rest in peace.

  • @timhague882
    @timhague882 9 лет назад +28

    Amazingly brave young men...

  • @Brian-om2hh
    @Brian-om2hh 4 года назад +60

    Brave men indeed. Just listening to this, recorded as it happened, they're all just getting on with it. No obvious signs of panic, even though they must have been scared sh*tless. A fair variation of regional accents too..... Some of the pictorial illustrations are inaccurate though, as tracer ammunition was not normally used at night in order to preserve the element of surprise. I was once also told by an ex Halifax pilot - sadly now deceased - that it was rare to actually spot another RAF aircraft over the target area. He said you got the feeling that you were very much on your own, apart from the occasional German Night Fighter.

    • @cliffordrashleigh137
      @cliffordrashleigh137 4 года назад +3

      The greatest generation

    • @reserva120
      @reserva120 4 года назад +2

      Who exactly didn't use Tracer ammunition ? may wish to double check that before coming off as a bit smug..

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh 4 года назад +1

      Read my post carefully. I stated tracer ammunition was not NORMALLY used at night. Certainly RAF night fighter squadrons didn't use it. The Germans were not stupid, so one might assume they didn't use it at night either for similar reasons. Nothing smug about it. It's a documented fact, out there if you look for it. If you read Flight Lieutenant Lewis Brandon's memoir ( titled Night Flyer - published by Kimber 1961) you'd see that, as an airborne radar (AI) operator in a 141 Squadron Beaufighter, he takes up the sory of an encounter with a Dornier 217 over the Northumberland coast on the 15th Feb 1942. He does state in his account that tracer ammunition was not used, in order not to give away the element of surprise.

    • @reserva120
      @reserva120 4 года назад

      @@Brian-om2hh I did re read your inaccurate post carefully, 1. Chuck owl did not draw the pictures correct, an used them in the context only to covey a sense to match the audio, 2 . your punk ass millennial sloth ridden statement" be carful about posting showing Tracers rounds".. borders on the psychotic . # Never once in Your post did you say in the Context of British fighters Nor in any shape or form is that statement relative to the Film & Audio at hand.( its NOT about British Night Fighters in anyway, correct).. Yup just good old fashion you Mucked up.. Let it go , an learn not to be a spoiled brat next time..

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 4 года назад +1

      @@Brian-om2hh My half brother was killed on the very last RAF mission, over kiel Germany, 3rd May '45, because a JU88 night fighter shot at and damaged, the flying controls of his Halifax Mk3--which colided with another Halifax, close by. Only 3 of the joint 16 crew, survived. My half brother was not one of them.(Both planes had a extra 'special Radar' jamming control member.)----100 Group, 199 Sqdn

  • @susanwaugh3885
    @susanwaugh3885 4 года назад +79

    I had mixed emotions listening to this. It was amazing, but heartbreaking at the same time hearing all the noise in the background and imagining what it must have been like for my great uncle.
    On 17th June 1944 my great uncle flight sergeant Charles Philp departed Elsham Wolds on a Avro Lancaster flight 576 squadron. He was a rear gunner and the crews mission that night was to bomb Sterkrade. The plane was hit by a flak and crashed in Rhade 9km outside of Dorsten, and my great uncle was killed on his 21st birthday. He is buried in Reichwalds Cemetery in Kleve, Germany. He was originally from Dunfermline in Scotland.
    I found a pic of him just 1 month ago on the internet and it’s the first time I have seen him in 39 years. I hope to visit his grave next year.

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 2 года назад +1

      Were you able to go, or did covid wreck your plans?

    • @stevecommons3822
      @stevecommons3822 2 года назад +4

      Susan - I agree wholeheartedly with you first paragraph. My father was on ops to Sterkrade on October 6, 1944 as rear gunner in a 578 squadron Halifax from RAF Burn near Selby. That was is 39th operation. He returned safely and made his final trip the following day to Kleve. The whole crew were then awarded DFMs for bringing back an on-target photograph each time. I am very sorry that your great uncle did not live to have a similar experience.

  • @joshjosh6526
    @joshjosh6526 4 года назад +204

    It has always amazed me at how in every recording of RAF crews I’ve ever heard, they are always so calm, even while being shot up. Amazing.

    • @HUMPTYNUGGET
      @HUMPTYNUGGET 4 года назад +14

      This is a trait with all aircrew it seems right up to today

    • @darinbolvin3663
      @darinbolvin3663 4 года назад +12

      The British stiff upper lip, eh?

    • @kohedunn
      @kohedunn 3 года назад +9

      Being calm was an expected state to be in ... It was taken for granted ..

    • @XxBloggs
      @XxBloggs Год назад +5

      2 Australians, one Scotsman and the rest British in the crew.

    • @pussypostlethwaitsaeronaut8503
      @pussypostlethwaitsaeronaut8503 11 месяцев назад

      @@XxBloggs The rest sounded English. Since when have the Scots not been British? The British are Welsh, Scottish, English, and Northern Irish. I'm an Englishwoman, also British, same as Scots, also British. The island of Great Britain contains three countries, and the UK four. xx

  • @chavey65
    @chavey65 8 лет назад +44

    Men of Steel,god bless them all

  • @VayaconChupacabra
    @VayaconChupacabra 6 лет назад +138

    "There goes the cookies......Looky, looky....."
    I don't think that I heard one swear word throughout this audio. They definitely do not make them *like these young men anymore.

    • @mikewellwood1412
      @mikewellwood1412 4 года назад +26

      There was a definite "bastards!" - about the Flak, so justified...

    • @MegaLJ3
      @MegaLJ3 4 года назад +16

      and especially evidenced by what we see today in the punks burning cities.

    • @vicecapo8767
      @vicecapo8767 4 года назад +1

      Bastard

    • @elijahlupe
      @elijahlupe 4 года назад +5

      @@MegaLJ3 Fuck off

    • @hyper6354
      @hyper6354 4 года назад +2

      elijahlupe why should they fuck off?

  • @epl803
    @epl803 4 года назад +26

    "4000 pounder's just gorn orf" "oh, good show!" "that's not bad at all!"

  • @slipnpitch1894
    @slipnpitch1894 7 лет назад +57

    9.00 "He's coming down! Weeeeeeeh! Bloody good show!"........"he's burning - don't he look lovely!" Absolute class and pride.

  • @Zerbey
    @Zerbey 9 лет назад +24

    Chilling to listen to, knowing many of these brave "few" never returned. Go thank one them if you can, before they all fade away forever.

  • @TheGarnerjustin73
    @TheGarnerjustin73 8 лет назад +39

    This is simply awesome experiencing a bombing run from the crew chatter.

  • @Ianjcarroll
    @Ianjcarroll 2 года назад +19

    "There goes the cookie", Wow, how calm and professional there heroes were back then... We owe them an unplayable debt of gratitude, God keep them in your eternal grace 🙏