FOR THE FALLEN...
This is the Pilgrims Way, the long distance and very ancient footpath that leads from Winchester to Canterbury. It passes through my bit of Kent and I took the photo above where the path hugs the lea of the North Downs in this part of Kent. A little further in to our walk, the Pilgrims Way is crossed by another footpath and so we turned left and started to make our way up the slope of the North Downs.....
We came to a field and followed the path until it came to a gateway which led to the higher ground......
And just beyond the gateway something caught my eye......
And I wondered what it could possibly be in this remote spot a long way off the beaten track. So we investigated by tramping through part of the hillside that is covered with wild thyme and brambles and it became apparent that what we were seeing was some kind of memorial. It turned out to be something rather special and so I took this close up photo which revealed the story.......
And a little research when we got home showed that Tommy Pinkham was the Squadron Leader of the Royal Air Force No. 19 Fighter Squadron and the youngest Squadron Leader in the RAF at the age of just 25. According to the Fighter Command Combat Report dated 5th September 1940, eleven members of the No. 19 Fighter Squadron, lead by Squadron Leader Pinkham, took off from RAF Duxford at 09.47 hours to patrol Hornchurch, an area east of London near the Thames Estuary. Forty Luftwaffe Dornier 215 bombers escorted by 40 Messerschmitt 109 fighters were spotted approaching from the west. At 10.15 hours Tommy and five others attacked the bombers with the other five aircraft in the squadron attacking the Luftwaffe fighters. Squadron Leader Pinkham was last seen engaging three Dornier bombers but became a casualty, crashing on this spot on this Kentish hillside, where the memorial is maintained to remember his selfless heroism.
It seemed especially poignant to come across this memorial during this year which marks the 75th anniversary of VE Day. And so we left this now very special place which now has the peace and serenity befitting its surroundings, thanks to men like Tommy Pinkham and his colleagues, to whom we owe so very much.
It seemed especially poignant to come across this memorial during this year which marks the 75th anniversary of VE Day. And so we left this now very special place which now has the peace and serenity befitting its surroundings, thanks to men like Tommy Pinkham and his colleagues, to whom we owe so very much.
No. 19 Fighter Squadron at RAF Duxford - Squadron Leader Tommy Pinkham in the centre.
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