Two U-boats sank on same sortie
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Well then when D-day came our particular assignment, and by ours
I mean our squadron. Well first of all, on our base if you can
imagine this, a squadron of B24's was probably 20 air planes.
There were four squadrons operating off this one base, and this
is virtually without any hangars or anything else. These aircraft
were serviced outside and looked after that way. And so it was
the job that we were assigned was what we called court patrols,
and we patrolled from Lands End in Britain to the Sherbrooke
Peninsula to Brest and the Isle of Ushent just off France.
And we had an air plane in the air every fifteen minutes,
fifteen minutes apart. And if you picked up say a contact with a
U-boat and attacked it, you were allowed to go down and take
one look to see about results. Then you jumped back up into
your slot and preserve the racetrack, as we used to call it.
And what happened with us, we didn't get out on D-Day.
We got out the night after D-Day, and we, in doing that we
detected two U-boats and sunk them in twenty-two minutes.
Now that was a tremendous thing and much more important than
would normally be because we had just lost thirty people.
So it was sort of accepted as a retaliation type thing.
I had a rule of thumb. When I got into trouble I went down not up
and that night, for example, once we had ignited our flares and
set that in motion I just ducked my nose down and went down
to the deck and went home and got out of there for the simple
reason I knew there would be fighters up and that's probably
what probably got the other three crews and I used to do
the same thing on U-boat attacks, I went in on the deck.
Description
Mr. Moore tells how he and his crew detected and sank two U-boats in 22 minutes. He also talks about how some of his flying techniques may have helped them (when three other crews were lost).
Ken Moore
Born in Rock Haven, Saskatchewan, Ken Moore was the youngest of eight children. His father died when he was very young and his mother raised the family on her own. After graduating from highschool, he hitchhiked to Vancouver, BC and joined the Air Force. During the war, he piloted 61 missions, in Liberators, on coastal escort duties and submarine patrols. During one such mission, his crew sank two U-boats in 22 minutes. Because of this act he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) and the Silver Star (by the US).
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:29
- Person Interviewed:
- Ken Moore
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Europe
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 224 Squadron
- Occupation:
- Pilot
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