Bombing Bangkok
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Interviewer: Did people shoot at you on those trips?
Oh, I can’t recall whether it would be that trip,
but they shot at us, I can tell you that.
The trips that stand out are the longest trips.
I did a couple of trips to Bangkok and then on those flights,
you flew all the way out to your turning point at 500 feet above
the sea. And then, when you were approaching the Isthmus of
Tirah, you started your climb because you had to get up to
around, in some cases, 30,000 feet just to get above the
weather. Then, of course, you came down the other side into the
Gulf of Siam. And on one trip I can recall ... one thing you’ve
got to remember about this is, when you got to the target, or
approaching the target, the navigator had to vacate his position
and let the bomb aimer in so he could lie on the floor, where
you usually stood, and use the bomb sight. We did ... One
specific mine laying operation we did was at 350 feet above the
ground. And we flew right into the harbour at Bangkok. And
when we got there, we found out that it seemed the whole harbour
was filled with Japanese war ships. And we got in there and
flew our course and dropped the, I think it was six, torpedoes,
not torpedoes, but mines. And then up, up and away, ‘cause I
had already figured out the course the pilot was to fly when we
were finished. And he just took off in that direction. But in
the meantime, there was an awful lot of flak coming up. We
never got hit at all. But that was a 15 hour trip when you did
these trips to Bangkok. Rangoon was about the shortest trip I
made. Went there a couple of times and it’s ten hours.
So we got our flying time in pretty quickly.
Description
Mr. Hosegood talks about a 15 hour flight to Bangkok and a harbor full of Japanese war ships.
William George Hosegood
William George Hosegood was born May 7th 1924. A carpenter’s son, Mr. Hosegood grew up with four brothers and five sisters in Fort William, Ontario. All of his brothers were in the military. “Money was scarce”, says Mr. Hosegood, who worked full time as a clerk at age 16, and held many other jobs before joining the army at 17 or 18. Originally placed in the reserve army, Mr. Hosegood joined the RCAF the next year. After graduating at the top of his navigational training class in Saskatoon, he was selected to go to Burma as a navigator. Mr. Hosegood says that his career in the military fashioned the rest of his life.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 3:04
- Person Interviewed:
- William George Hosegood
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Southeast Asia
- Battle/Campaign:
- Burma
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 159 Squadron
- Rank:
- Flying Officer
- Occupation:
- Navigator
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