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James Catanach

James Catanach (28 November 1921 – 29 March 1944) was an Australian Handley Page Hampden bomber pilot who was taken prisoner during the Second World War. Reportedly the youngest squadron leader bomber pilot in the Royal Australian Air Force at the age of twenty, he took part in the 'Great Escape' from Stalag Luft III in March 1944 and was one of the men re-captured and murdered by the Gestapo.

James Catanach
RAAF airmen on the set of the BBC's Anzac Hour radio show, 1942. Catanach is in the centre (in uniform).
Birth nameJames Catanach
Nickname(s)Jim
Born(1921-11-28)28 November 1921
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Died29 March 1944(1944-03-29) (aged 22)
near Kiel, Free State of Prussia, Nazi Germany
Buried
Poznan Old Garrison Cemetery, Poland
AllegianceAustralia
Service/branch Royal Australian Air Force
Years of service1940–44
RankSquadron Leader
Service numberAus.400364
UnitNo. 455 Squadron RAAF
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsDistinguished Flying Cross, Mentioned in despatches

Pre-war life edit

Catanach was born in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, the son of Ruby and William Catanach, a jeweller. He attended Brighton Grammar School from 1929 to 1931 and then Geelong Grammar School where he spent three years in the cadet corps. After graduating in 1938 he went to work with his older brother, Bill, in the family business.[1][2]

War service edit

James Catanach was a salesman until he joined the Royal Australian Air Force on 18 August 1940, to learn to fly.[3][4] Meanwhile, his brother enlisted in the Army.[5] On completion of basic initial training at Somers and Narrandera Catanach was posted to Canada where he learned to fly and received his pilot's wings in June 1941 being commissioned pilot officer.[1] He was subsequently posted to Great Britain to fly with RAF Bomber Command. Initially flying with No. 144 Squadron RAF, he was transferred to No. 455 Squadron RAAF after completing nine missions.[5]

No. 455 Squadron RAAF formed at RAF Swinderby, in Lincolnshire and had received Handley Page Hampden bombers by the time the bulk of the Australian personnel arrived on 1 September 1941, having departed Australia by sea on 15 June. Initially assigned to No. 5 Group RAF, Bomber Command in a bomber role, its first operation took place while the squadron was still forming, when a single Hampden attacked Frankfurt at night on 29 August. In doing so, according to the Australian War Memorial, the squadron had the distinction of becoming the "first Australian squadron to bomb Germany". Following this, the squadron increased its operational tempo, undertaking several mine laying operations off the coast of occupied France, as well attacking industrial targets in Germany.[6] These missions were flown by Jim Catanach.[7]

 
A No. 455 Squadron RAAF Hampden, 1942

In February 1942, the squadron took part in an unsuccessful attack on the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, before being re-roled as a torpedo-bomber squadron and transferred to RAF Coastal Command on 26 April 1942; they subsequently deployed a detachment briefly to Vaenga (now Severomorsk) in the Soviet Union in September.[8] Catanach had completed nine operations with RAF Bomber Command before the transfer.[1] The detachment was to operate in support of convoys bound for Russia, which were at the time suffering heavy losses. However, three of the 16 Hamptons were lost prior to arrival, one of them flown by Catanach. After completing one anti-shipping sweep with the Russians the remaining aircraft were handed over to the Soviet Air Forces with the RAAF crews instructing the Soviets on their operation. Following the completion of this task the squadron returned to RAF Sumburgh. In June 1942, Catanach was promoted squadron leader, becoming reputedly the youngest in the Royal Australian Air Force to hold that rank.[1][4][9]

Prisoner of war edit

Catanach and his crew took off in Handley Page Hampden serial number "AT109" from RAF Sumburgh at 20:40 hours on the night of 4/5 September 1942 for Vaenja, Northern Russia, via Afrikanda. Nearing the end of the long flight his aircraft was holed in the petrol tanks by ground fire or heavy machine gun fire from a German trawler and Catanach force landed under fire on the shoreline near Kirkenes (Northern Norway) as he closed in on Murmansk[10] avoiding ditching in the Arctic waters and saving the lives of his crew.[11][12] Captured immediately by a nearby German patrol, he and his crew became prisoners of war and Catanach was eventually put into prisoner of war camp Stalag Luft III in the province of Lower Silesia near the town of Sagan (now Żagań in Poland).[13][14]

The Great Escape edit

 
Model of Stalag Luft III prison camp.

Catanach was one of the 76 men who escaped the prison camp on the night of 24–25 March 1944 in the escape now famous as "the Great Escape".[13][14] Catanach was fluent in German and took trouble to learn conversational Norwegian from Scandinavian prisoners in the prison camp.[1] He teamed up with two Norwegians, Halldor Espelid and Nils Jørgen Fuglesang, and the New Zealander Arnold George Christensen who was of Scandinavian descent, in a group heading for Denmark and possibly ultimately neutral Sweden. Catanach and Christensen reached Berlin[15] as they were seen there by other escapers before changing trains to Hamburg which they also reached successfully only to be caught on the next leg of their rail journey from Hamburg to the naval town of Flensburg on the Danish border. Nearing the border suspicious policemen insisted on carefully examining their papers, checking their briefcases which contained newspapers and escape rations. Close inspection of their clothing revealed they were wearing altered greatcoats.[4] Although the four escapers has split up to pretend to be travelling individually they were all in the same railway carriage, more policemen arrived and closely examined every passenger, soon arresting all four suspects. The escapers were taken to Flensburg prison.[16]

 
Memorial to "The Fifty" down the road toward Żagań (Catanach at left)

The four airmen were handed over to the Kiel Gestapo and after interrogation were told that they would be taken by road back to prison camp.[17][18] On 29 March 1944, two or three black sedan cars arrived, Catanach was taken in the first car with three Gestapo agents including SS-Sturmbannfuhrer Johannes Post a senior officer based there.[19] Post had his driver stop the car in the countryside outside Kiel about 1630 hours and called Catanach out into a field where he promptly shot him.[20] The second (and possibly a third) car drew up in the same place shortly afterwards and Post told his agents to get Christensen, Espelid and Fuglesang out, stating that they should take a break before their long drive. As the airmen walked into the field they almost stumbled over Catanach's body as they were also shot.[16][21][22][23][24][25] Catanach was one of the 50 escapers who had been listed by SS-Gruppenfuhrer Arthur Nebe to be killed so was amongst those executed and murdered by the Gestapo.[26][27][28] His remains were buried at Sagan but he now lies in part of the Poznan Old Garrison Cemetery.[29] The Australian press maintained a chase for information and justice for their murdered airmen.[30] Strangely his name was not on the list of murdered officers which was published by newspapers on 20 May 1944.[31]

Awards edit

The Distinguished Flying Cross was awarded on 23 June 1942 to Acting Flight Lieutenant James Catanach (Aus.400364), Royal Australian Air Force, No. 455 Squadron RAAF.[32] On three occasions he brought his aircraft and crew home seriously despite severe battle damage. He had made bombing attacks on Essen, Cologne, Lubeck, Hamburg, Kiel and Lorient.[1][3][7][33]

His conspicuous bravery as a prisoner was recognized by a Mention in Despatches as none of the other relevant decorations then available could be awarded posthumously. It was published in a supplement to the London Gazette on 8 June 1944.[34][35][36]

His awards were presented posthumously to his father at Government House, Melbourne, Victoria, on 16 September 1944.[7]

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f (PDF). Brighton Grammar School. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  2. ^ Vance (2001), pp. 116–117
  3. ^ a b "Catanach, James". World War Two Nominal Roll. Australian Government. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  4. ^ a b c Edlington, David. . Air Force News (4605 ed.). Archived from the original on 20 November 2007. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  5. ^ a b Vance (2001), p. 117
  6. ^ "No. 455 Squadron RAAF". Second World War, 1939–1945 units. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  7. ^ a b c "Distinguished Flying Cross card – James Catanach". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 29 August 2015.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ Moyle (1989), pp.47–49
  9. ^ Moyle (1989), p.49
  10. ^ Moyle (1989), pp.44–47
  11. ^ "James Catanach DFC". Collection. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  12. ^ Moyle (1989), pp.46–48
  13. ^ a b Raebel (1997), p.57
  14. ^ a b Herington (1963), p.495
  15. ^ Andrews (1976), p.55
  16. ^ a b Walker (2015)
  17. ^ Read (2012), pp.23–34
  18. ^ "Photos of the 4 escapers after arrest" (PDF). LG Corneille. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  19. ^ Read (2012), pp.24–32
  20. ^ Andrews (1976), pp.169–172
  21. ^ Andrews (1976), pp.177–178
  22. ^ Read (2012), pp.30–34
  23. ^ Andrews (1976) p.196
  24. ^ Burgess (1990), p.270
  25. ^ "Stalag Luft III: The Fifty". Pegasus Archive. Retrieved 28 August 2015.
  26. ^ Andrews (1976), p.34
  27. ^ Feast (2015), p.140
  28. ^ Andrews (1976), p.205
  29. ^ Reading Room Manchester. "Catanach, James". CWGC—Casualty Details. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  30. ^ "War Crimes Trial: Australians Murdered". The Morning Bulletin. Rockhampton, Queensland. 28 February 1946. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  31. ^ Western Morning News, Dundee Courier, Yorkshire Post, etc. 20/05/1944
  32. ^ "No. 35609". The London Gazette (Supplement). 23 June 1942. pp. 2818–2819.
  33. ^ "DFC award James Catanach". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  34. ^ "No. 36544". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 June 1944. pp. 2642–2643.
  35. ^ "MID award James Catanach DFC". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  36. ^ "Mention in Despatches card – James Catanach". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 29 August 2015.[permanent dead link]
Bibliography
  • Andrews, Allen (1976). Exemplary Justice. Harrap. ISBN 0-245-52775-3.
  • Ash, William; Foley, Brendan (2005). Under the Wire: The Wartime Memoir of a Spitfire Pilot, Legendary Escape Artist and 'Cooler King'. Bantam. ISBN 978-0-593-05408-6.
  • Brickhill, Paul (2004). The Great Escape. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-32579-9.
  • Burgess, Alan (1990). The Longest Tunnel: The True Story of World War II's Great Escape. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-097-9.
  • Clark, Albert P. (2005). 33 Months as a POW in Stalag Luft III: A World War II Airman Tells His Story. Fulcrum Pub. ISBN 978-1-55591-536-0.
  • Durand, Arthur A. (1989). Stalag Luft III: The Secret Story. Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 978-1-85260-248-2.
  • Feast, Sean (2015). The Last of the 39-ers. Grub Street. ISBN 978-1909166158.
  • Herington, John (1963). Air Power Over Europe, 1944–1945. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 3 – Air. Vol. IV (1st ed.). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 3633419.
  • Moyle, Harry (1989). The Hampden File. Air Britain. ISBN 0-85130-128-2.
  • Raebel, Geoffrey W. (1997). The RAAF in Russia: 455 Squadron, 1942. Loftus, New South Wales: Australian Military History Publications. ISBN 0-9586693-5-X.
  • Read, Simon (2012). Human Game: The True Story of the 'Great Escape' Murders and the Hunt for the Gestapo Gunmen. Berkley. ISBN 978-042525-273-4.
  • Vance, Jonathan F. (2001). A Gallant Company. Pacifica Military. ISBN 978-0-935-55347-5.
  • Walker, Frank (2015). Commandos: Heroic and Deadly ANZAC Raids. Import Aus. ISBN 978-0733631535.

External links edit

  • by Mark Kozak-Holland. The prisoners formally structured their work as a project. This analyses their efforts using modern project management methods.

james, catanach, november, 1921, march, 1944, australian, handley, page, hampden, bomber, pilot, taken, prisoner, during, second, world, reportedly, youngest, squadron, leader, bomber, pilot, royal, australian, force, twenty, took, part, great, escape, from, s. James Catanach 28 November 1921 29 March 1944 was an Australian Handley Page Hampden bomber pilot who was taken prisoner during the Second World War Reportedly the youngest squadron leader bomber pilot in the Royal Australian Air Force at the age of twenty he took part in the Great Escape from Stalag Luft III in March 1944 and was one of the men re captured and murdered by the Gestapo James CatanachRAAF airmen on the set of the BBC s Anzac Hour radio show 1942 Catanach is in the centre in uniform Birth nameJames CatanachNickname s JimBorn 1921 11 28 28 November 1921Melbourne Victoria AustraliaDied29 March 1944 1944 03 29 aged 22 near Kiel Free State of Prussia Nazi GermanyBuriedPoznan Old Garrison Cemetery PolandAllegianceAustraliaService wbr branch Royal Australian Air ForceYears of service1940 44RankSquadron LeaderService numberAus 400364UnitNo 455 Squadron RAAFBattles warsWorld War II Channel Front POW AwardsDistinguished Flying Cross Mentioned in despatches Contents 1 Pre war life 2 War service 3 Prisoner of war 4 The Great Escape 5 Awards 6 References 7 External linksPre war life editCatanach was born in Melbourne Victoria Australia the son of Ruby and William Catanach a jeweller He attended Brighton Grammar School from 1929 to 1931 and then Geelong Grammar School where he spent three years in the cadet corps After graduating in 1938 he went to work with his older brother Bill in the family business 1 2 War service editJames Catanach was a salesman until he joined the Royal Australian Air Force on 18 August 1940 to learn to fly 3 4 Meanwhile his brother enlisted in the Army 5 On completion of basic initial training at Somers and Narrandera Catanach was posted to Canada where he learned to fly and received his pilot s wings in June 1941 being commissioned pilot officer 1 He was subsequently posted to Great Britain to fly with RAF Bomber Command Initially flying with No 144 Squadron RAF he was transferred to No 455 Squadron RAAF after completing nine missions 5 No 455 Squadron RAAF formed at RAF Swinderby in Lincolnshire and had received Handley Page Hampden bombers by the time the bulk of the Australian personnel arrived on 1 September 1941 having departed Australia by sea on 15 June Initially assigned to No 5 Group RAF Bomber Command in a bomber role its first operation took place while the squadron was still forming when a single Hampden attacked Frankfurt at night on 29 August In doing so according to the Australian War Memorial the squadron had the distinction of becoming the first Australian squadron to bomb Germany Following this the squadron increased its operational tempo undertaking several mine laying operations off the coast of occupied France as well attacking industrial targets in Germany 6 These missions were flown by Jim Catanach 7 nbsp A No 455 Squadron RAAF Hampden 1942 In February 1942 the squadron took part in an unsuccessful attack on the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau before being re roled as a torpedo bomber squadron and transferred to RAF Coastal Command on 26 April 1942 they subsequently deployed a detachment briefly to Vaenga now Severomorsk in the Soviet Union in September 8 Catanach had completed nine operations with RAF Bomber Command before the transfer 1 The detachment was to operate in support of convoys bound for Russia which were at the time suffering heavy losses However three of the 16 Hamptons were lost prior to arrival one of them flown by Catanach After completing one anti shipping sweep with the Russians the remaining aircraft were handed over to the Soviet Air Forces with the RAAF crews instructing the Soviets on their operation Following the completion of this task the squadron returned to RAF Sumburgh In June 1942 Catanach was promoted squadron leader becoming reputedly the youngest in the Royal Australian Air Force to hold that rank 1 4 9 Prisoner of war editCatanach and his crew took off in Handley Page Hampden serial number AT109 from RAF Sumburgh at 20 40 hours on the night of 4 5 September 1942 for Vaenja Northern Russia via Afrikanda Nearing the end of the long flight his aircraft was holed in the petrol tanks by ground fire or heavy machine gun fire from a German trawler and Catanach force landed under fire on the shoreline near Kirkenes Northern Norway as he closed in on Murmansk 10 avoiding ditching in the Arctic waters and saving the lives of his crew 11 12 Captured immediately by a nearby German patrol he and his crew became prisoners of war and Catanach was eventually put into prisoner of war camp Stalag Luft III in the province of Lower Silesia near the town of Sagan now Zagan in Poland 13 14 The Great Escape edit nbsp Model of Stalag Luft III prison camp Catanach was one of the 76 men who escaped the prison camp on the night of 24 25 March 1944 in the escape now famous as the Great Escape 13 14 Catanach was fluent in German and took trouble to learn conversational Norwegian from Scandinavian prisoners in the prison camp 1 He teamed up with two Norwegians Halldor Espelid and Nils Jorgen Fuglesang and the New Zealander Arnold George Christensen who was of Scandinavian descent in a group heading for Denmark and possibly ultimately neutral Sweden Catanach and Christensen reached Berlin 15 as they were seen there by other escapers before changing trains to Hamburg which they also reached successfully only to be caught on the next leg of their rail journey from Hamburg to the naval town of Flensburg on the Danish border Nearing the border suspicious policemen insisted on carefully examining their papers checking their briefcases which contained newspapers and escape rations Close inspection of their clothing revealed they were wearing altered greatcoats 4 Although the four escapers has split up to pretend to be travelling individually they were all in the same railway carriage more policemen arrived and closely examined every passenger soon arresting all four suspects The escapers were taken to Flensburg prison 16 nbsp Memorial to The Fifty down the road toward Zagan Catanach at left The four airmen were handed over to the Kiel Gestapo and after interrogation were told that they would be taken by road back to prison camp 17 18 On 29 March 1944 two or three black sedan cars arrived Catanach was taken in the first car with three Gestapo agents including SS Sturmbannfuhrer Johannes Post a senior officer based there 19 Post had his driver stop the car in the countryside outside Kiel about 1630 hours and called Catanach out into a field where he promptly shot him 20 The second and possibly a third car drew up in the same place shortly afterwards and Post told his agents to get Christensen Espelid and Fuglesang out stating that they should take a break before their long drive As the airmen walked into the field they almost stumbled over Catanach s body as they were also shot 16 21 22 23 24 25 Catanach was one of the 50 escapers who had been listed by SS Gruppenfuhrer Arthur Nebe to be killed so was amongst those executed and murdered by the Gestapo 26 27 28 His remains were buried at Sagan but he now lies in part of the Poznan Old Garrison Cemetery 29 The Australian press maintained a chase for information and justice for their murdered airmen 30 Strangely his name was not on the list of murdered officers which was published by newspapers on 20 May 1944 31 Awards editThe Distinguished Flying Cross was awarded on 23 June 1942 to Acting Flight Lieutenant James Catanach Aus 400364 Royal Australian Air Force No 455 Squadron RAAF 32 On three occasions he brought his aircraft and crew home seriously despite severe battle damage He had made bombing attacks on Essen Cologne Lubeck Hamburg Kiel and Lorient 1 3 7 33 His conspicuous bravery as a prisoner was recognized by a Mention in Despatches as none of the other relevant decorations then available could be awarded posthumously It was published in a supplement to the London Gazette on 8 June 1944 34 35 36 His awards were presented posthumously to his father at Government House Melbourne Victoria on 16 September 1944 7 References editNotes a b c d e f James Catanach DFC PDF Brighton Grammar School Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 29 August 2015 Vance 2001 pp 116 117 a b Catanach James World War Two Nominal Roll Australian Government Retrieved 29 August 2015 a b c Edlington David The great crime Aussies among murder victims Air Force News 4605 ed Archived from the original on 20 November 2007 Retrieved 29 August 2015 a b Vance 2001 p 117 No 455 Squadron RAAF Second World War 1939 1945 units Australian War Memorial Retrieved 29 August 2015 a b c Distinguished Flying Cross card James Catanach Australian War Memorial Retrieved 29 August 2015 permanent dead link Moyle 1989 pp 47 49 Moyle 1989 p 49 Moyle 1989 pp 44 47 James Catanach DFC Collection Australian War Memorial Retrieved 29 August 2015 Moyle 1989 pp 46 48 a b Raebel 1997 p 57 a b Herington 1963 p 495 Andrews 1976 p 55 a b Walker 2015 Read 2012 pp 23 34 Photos of the 4 escapers after arrest PDF LG Corneille Retrieved 29 August 2015 Read 2012 pp 24 32 Andrews 1976 pp 169 172 Andrews 1976 pp 177 178 Read 2012 pp 30 34 Andrews 1976 p 196 Burgess 1990 p 270 Stalag Luft III The Fifty Pegasus Archive Retrieved 28 August 2015 Andrews 1976 p 34 Feast 2015 p 140 Andrews 1976 p 205 Reading Room Manchester Catanach James CWGC Casualty Details Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 29 August 2015 War Crimes Trial Australians Murdered The Morning Bulletin Rockhampton Queensland 28 February 1946 Retrieved 29 August 2015 Western Morning News Dundee Courier Yorkshire Post etc 20 05 1944 No 35609 The London Gazette Supplement 23 June 1942 pp 2818 2819 DFC award James Catanach Australian War Memorial Retrieved 29 August 2015 No 36544 The London Gazette Supplement 2 June 1944 pp 2642 2643 MID award James Catanach DFC Australian War Memorial Retrieved 29 August 2015 Mention in Despatches card James Catanach Australian War Memorial Retrieved 29 August 2015 permanent dead link Bibliography Andrews Allen 1976 Exemplary Justice Harrap ISBN 0 245 52775 3 Ash William Foley Brendan 2005 Under the Wire The Wartime Memoir of a Spitfire Pilot Legendary Escape Artist and Cooler King Bantam ISBN 978 0 593 05408 6 Brickhill Paul 2004 The Great Escape W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 32579 9 Burgess Alan 1990 The Longest Tunnel The True Story of World War II s Great Escape Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 097 9 Clark Albert P 2005 33 Months as a POW in Stalag Luft III A World War II Airman Tells His Story Fulcrum Pub ISBN 978 1 55591 536 0 Durand Arthur A 1989 Stalag Luft III The Secret Story Patrick Stephens Limited ISBN 978 1 85260 248 2 Feast Sean 2015 The Last of the 39 ers Grub Street ISBN 978 1909166158 Herington John 1963 Air Power Over Europe 1944 1945 Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 3 Air Vol IV 1st ed Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 3633419 Moyle Harry 1989 The Hampden File Air Britain ISBN 0 85130 128 2 Raebel Geoffrey W 1997 The RAAF in Russia 455 Squadron 1942 Loftus New South Wales Australian Military History Publications ISBN 0 9586693 5 X Read Simon 2012 Human Game The True Story of the Great Escape Murders and the Hunt for the Gestapo Gunmen Berkley ISBN 978 042525 273 4 Vance Jonathan F 2001 A Gallant Company Pacifica Military ISBN 978 0 935 55347 5 Walker Frank 2015 Commandos Heroic and Deadly ANZAC Raids Import Aus ISBN 978 0733631535 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Catanach Project Lessons from the Great Escape Stalag Luft III by Mark Kozak Holland The prisoners formally structured their work as a project This book analyses their efforts using modern project management methods Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Catanach amp oldid 1222057503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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