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At Dunnville
1 may, 1943 - Dunnville - At a Wings parade today, at
No. 6 S.F.T.S., Canadian, United States and English airmen were presented
with badges. Amongst Ontario men included were: A. G. Borland of Guelph
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Alexander George Borland (J/25780)
Son of John and Jessie Borland, of Guelph, Ontario |
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Canadian Pilots Blow Up Trains, Destroy 5 Germans in
5 Minutes
With a Canadian Fighter Wing in Britain, May 22, 1944
- (CP) - Piling the Canadian score higher all through the day in the sustained,
aerial offensive, pilots of the City of Oshawa Spitfire Squadron late
today added five more trains damaged to their earlier bag of five enemy
planes destroyed and six enemy trains shot up in a foray over the Cherbourg
Peninsula.
Their bag of 11 trains today raised to 24 the number they have attacked
since yesterday morning and gave Canadian squadrons operating from this
British 2nd Tactical Air Force airfield a total of 31 trains shot up in
the same period.
The Canadians' total bag of planes for the day was brought to seven by
FO. Bud Bowker of Granby, Que., who shot two
FW190's into the English Channel while on a gun-testing flight in a Spitfire.
Putting in his operational rest period between tours as a pilot with a
Canadian repair and salvage unit, Bowker took off from this base today
to test the guns of a Spitfire. He bumped into two Focke-Wulf 190's over
the English Channel and sent them both crashing into the sea.
It was the first time this stocky flier, who had been "getting so
darn sick of doing nothing," had taken off with guns loaded since
he came off operations last February. The double victory brought his score
to seven enemy aircraft destroyed.
Standing beside a mobile hangar around which Spitfires were being overhauled,
Bowker, in battle dress and wearing flying boots, pushed his cap back
on his head and told the story of his victory, achieved in a matter of
seconds.
He was flying in the direction of St. Valerie and about a quarter of the
way across the Channel he sighted the FW190's, flying in line abreast
in a northeasterly direction.
Were Carrying Bombs, Rockets
Bowker said the enemy planes were carrying bombs or rockets.
"I crawled up behind them and went after one and they broke toward
the French coast," he related. “I let one have a 20-degree
shot and he blew up. The exploding aircraft swerved to one side and the
other just barely bounced off it, went up 100 feet and then crashed into
the sea.”
Today's Canadian successes were achieved without loss.
The third sortie of the day against enemy transport in France was led
by Sqdn Ldr. Freddie Green, D.F.C.; Toronto, who took five of his pilots
into attacks against four freight trains and a petrol train.
The locomotive of the petrol train was left with steam pouring from it
and two oil cars blazing.
A section of the Red Indian squadron under Sqdn, Ldr. Walter Conrad,
D.F.C. of Richmond, Ont., attacked two trains 20 miles west of Paris just
before dusk tonight.
One was a troop train and the Red Indians gave it a double dose of cannon
and machine-gun fire, flying in through heavy ack-ack to deliver their
blow.
The bag of five enemy planes to pilots of the City of Oshawa squadron
came in a five-minute combat in the Rouen sector of France when the Canadians
were returning from a train busting foray northwest of Paris.
Six planes of the squadron met an equal number of Germans and the Dominion
filers attacked despite the fact their ammunition was dangerously low.
Three of the German planes were downed in 10 seconds.
Pilots who each downed an FW190 were Flt. Lt. R. D. Forbes-Roberts of
Vancouver, leader of a section; Flt. Lt. G. R. Paterson of Kelowna, B.C.,
and FO. W. H. Palmer of Kamloops and Salmon Arm, B.C.
Flt. Lts. S. F. Mason of Smiths Falls, and A. R. McFadden of Springdale,
Alta., each downed a Messerschmitt 109.
Fired Compressed Air
Mason's victory over his Messerschmitt victim came after he had expended
all his ammunition, shooting up trains. He got on the German's tail, followed
him close to the ground and the Jerry, apparently excited, flipped his
machine over in evasive action and plunged into the ground. All Mason
did, he said, was fire a couple of rounds of "compressed air"
from his empty guns.
FO. Palmer had a close call. He was only 20 yards behind his German victim
when the Nazi exploded and debris whistled around Palmer's cockpit but
did no harm.
FO. G. A. Borland of Guelph was also in this action but
went scoreless because he chose to protect the tail of Flt. Lt. McFadden.
Borland already has five German planes to his credit
from previous, actions. (note - these could all be shared or damaged -
ed)
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Air Force Casualties
Ottawa, Jan. 9, 1945 - The Department of National Defense for Air today
issued Casualty List No. 1086 of the Royal Canadian Air Force, showing
next of kin of those named from Ontario include:
Missing After Air Operations (Believed Killed)
BORLAND, Alexander George, FO. J. L. Borland (father),
Guelph
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Air Force Casualties
Ottawa, Aug. 14, 1945 — The Department of National
Defense for Air today issued casually lists Nos. 1,254 and 1,255 of the
Royal Canadian Air Force, showing next-of-kin of those named from Ontario
include:
Previously Missing Believed Killed, now Officially Presumed Dead
BORLAND, Alexander George, FO. J. L. Borland (father),
Guelph
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--- Canadian Aces ---
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