Here is a little
more about Tom Leigh’s life.
Tom Leigh was born
in Waverley, Sydney, on 11 February 1919. He was the second son—and child—of a
British father and Australian mother who lived in Shanghai, China. His mother
had returned to Australia for his birth, and later for that of his sister. By
the time of his mother’s death in 1926, Tom and his siblings were much
travelled, having visited Australia on a number of occasions. Their father died
in 1932, but the three children had lived in England since their mother’s
death. They all attended boarding schools and spent holidays with family
friends or their guardian.
After turning
15, Tom took the entrance examination for the Training Ship Mercury. He passed, was declared
medically fit for sea service, and commenced on 30 September 1934.
TS Mercury was located near Hamble airfield
near Southampton, in Hampshire and it seems the aerial activities attracted
Tom’s attention. Rather than the natural progression into the Royal Navy or
Merchant service, within months he was being coached for the entrance
examination at the Royal Air Force’s No. 1 School of Technical Training at
Halton, located near the village of Halton, in Buckinghamshire the heart of the Chilterns. He left Mercury
on 29th July 1935 and joined the 32nd Entry of apprentices on 20 August.
Allocated service number 568142, he was attached to A Squadron, No. 1 Wing as
an aero engine Fitter II. He was promoted to Leading Apprentice and took on additional
responsibilities which usually included commanding a room of 21 junior boys.
With responsibility came privilege, and he moved from his dormitory to a room
of his own. He
passed out on 26th
July 1938 and
was attached to 48
Squadron squadron as an Aircraftman
2nd Class.
Tom was later
offered aircrew training and was posted as an air gunner to the newly reforming
76 Squadron RAF in May 1941. Based at Linton-on-Ouse, Yorkshire, 76 was a heavy
bomber squadron. After relocating to Middleton St George, County Durham, the
squadron carried out its first operation on the night of 12/13 June. It
continued to play its part in the RAF’s bombing offensive, carrying out raids
on a variety of targets including industrial centres and railways.
Tom was gazetted
as a sergeant and allocated service number 46462 with effect from 2 August 1941
on 30 September 1941. But he did not see the gazettal.
On the night of
5 August 1941, he was the rear air gunner on Handley Page Halifax L9516, which
was tasked with bombing railway workshops at Karlsruhe in southwest Germany. They
took off from Middleton St George at about 9.45 p.m. and reached the target
area with little worry. They bombed the larger of two fires below, possibly at
Mannheim, and were then badly coned. They copped a lot of flak and one half of
the Halifax’s tail unit was destroyed. At about 2.00 a.m., the pilot, Sergeant Thomas
Byrne, put the Halifax into a steep dive and gave the order to bale out. Byrne
made it as far as the Belgian coast where he was shot down by a fighter, and crashed
near Glabbeek in Belgium. He was captured at Louvain shortly afterwards.
It seems the
Halifax was quite low before the men were able to jump. Flight Sergeant Cyril
Flockhart, for instance, parachuted out at 500 or 600 feet. He landed on a road
between Worms and Lampertheim and was later captured near Worms. Sergeants
George Taylor and Leonard Thomson were captured near Karlsruhe and Sergeant John
Pitt was nabbed at Mannheim. Sergeant Brown did not survive.
Tom was on the
run for about five hours before he, like Flockhart, was caught near Worms at
7.00 a.m. He and Flockhart travelled separately after landing, and were not
captured together, but both were taken to the barracks at Worms where they were
interrogated by a series of polite Army and Luftwaffe officers, who all spoke
English well. Later that day, they were taken to Dulag Luft at Oberusel, near
Frankfurt, where they experienced more sophisticated interrogation.
From there, Tom was purged to another camp but, by October 1942, was in Stalag Luft III near Sagan, in the German province of Lower Silesia. He was originally in East Compound and, when it was
opened in March 1943, he was moved to North Compound, from which he made his
bid for escape on the night of 24/25 March 1944.
There are many
gaps in Tom’s story and I will slowly work on filling them. Sometimes, if I am
lucky, scraps of information, gleaned from official forms and letters, when
combined with memories, take on a new meaning.
The only photos
of Tom are black and white. I spend hours looking at them trying to glean every
possible shred of evidence from them; trying to conjure something of the three
dimensional personality hidden by the two dimensional image. Tom looks such a
happy young man in the photo, snapped so many decades ago. His eyes shine and
dance and smile. His service record revealed that those glowing eyes were blue.
Blue eyes. To know that, makes all the difference. So too, does the
recollection of Canadian George Sweanor, who recalls
that Tom had a boyish charm that appeared so carefree.
When
the time came to nominate the inscription for Tom’s headstone, his sister nominated
this quartet from Kipling:
E’en
as he trod that day to God
So
walked he from his birthIn singleness and gentleness
and honour and clear mirth.
Because
of letter limitations, the Imperial War Graves Commission would only allow a
contraction:
E’en
as he trod
that
day to GodSo walked he
from his birth
How
well George’s recollection tallies with the way Tom’s sister remembered him, as
attested by the Kipling quote, and also from his smiling photos.
I
was thrilled when Geoff Swallow recently provided me with a copy of Tom’s grave
so I could see the meaningful inscription. For those of you who don’t know,
Geoff is the man behind the RAAF Deaths Photographic Archive of Headstones and Memorials and his aim is
to collect headstones or memorial photos of every one of these Australians
who died in the Air Force in WWII. Please like his Facebook page if you haven’t
already done so. https://www.facebook.com/pages/RAAF-Deaths-Photographic-Archive-of-Headstones-and-Memorials-WW2-by-Spidge/223714254314847?fref=ts
This photo was taken during one of the All Saints Day ceremonies, held
on 1 November every year. On this day, Polish Catholics make pilgrimages to the
graves of those who have gone before. They tend the graves, lay wreaths, and light
candles. As evening falls, the flickering candlelight creates a wonderfully
evocative, reflective atmosphere.