_________________________________________________
Flt. Lt. Beurling Down's 31st Plane Over French Area
London, December 30, 1943 – (CP Cable) –
Canada's top ranking fighter ace flight lieutenant George Beurling
of Verdun, Québec shot down his 31st enemy plane today, one of
four destroyed by RCAF fighters.
One of Beurling's squadron mates, F/O William Bliss of Toronto, shot down
another while the other two successful pilots were F/O Hart Finley of
Montréal and P/O Claude Weaver of Oklahoma
City.
The combats, from which all the Canadian Planes returned, took place southeast
of Paris, where enemy fighters attempted to intercept United States heavy
bombers returning from an attack on Germany. Beurling and Bliss shot down
Focke-Wulf 190s, while Finley and Weaver destroyed Messerschmitt 109's.
Beurling, who destroyed the Nazi after a 20 mile chase, saw the enemy
blow up after one short burst. The pilot bailed out.
It was the first enemy playing down by brewing since he celebrated his
return to action September 24 by getting his 30th. He had been yearning
to get back into combat flying ever since he was stationed in Malta, where
he ran his score of down planes from two to 29.
He transferred from the RAF to the RCAF September 1 to get back into the
air. Before that, he had been assigned to an instructor's job in an RAF
gunnery school after his return to Britain from a leave in Canada.
Played With Uplands
Pilot Officer Hart Finley is known to all football fans, having played
the 1942 season here with the Uplands RCAF team in this city's Senior
Football League. Finley played outside wing. The uplands team won the
local championship and later bowed to Toronto RCAF Hurricanes in the Eastern
Canada final at Toronto.
_________________________________________________
Born in Montreal, 1920;
home there.
Educated at McGill University.
Timekeeper.
Former COTC and RCA.
Enlisted in Montreal, 14 September 1940.
Trained at
No.1 ITS (graduated 21 December 1940),
No.4 EFTS (graduated 20 February 1941) and
No.9 SFTS (graduated 28 May 1941).
Instructed at Uplands (2 SFTS) for one year
Commissioned from W/O to P/O in 1942
F/O January 1943
To UK Feb 1943
Spent march at 14 (P)AFU & 5(P)AFU
April at 59 OTU
Posted to 1 Sq in June but
moved to 416 later in the month
Bailed out of malfunctioning Spit 12 Aug
Rescued from the Channel
Transferred to 443 Sq. in Sept.
Promoted to F/L in March 1944
Attended Fighter leaders course in May-June
Posted to 53 OTU in July as an instructor
In Aug he was attached to the FAA for a short stint
Went to canada on leave in December
Rejoined 403 Sq. in march
Posted to 443 Sq. in April
Missing (safe), 2 May 1945 - successfully bailed out
-at 200 ft. after his Spit was set on fire
-by return fire from a Ju88 he was attacking
Returned to unit 3 days later
Awarded DFC on 24 July
Promoted to S/L later that month
Joined RCAF HQ in Sept.
But returned to canada the next month
Released from service
Flew for KLM 1946-48
Served with the canadian Dept. of Transport
And the Boy Scouts of canada
Lived in Ottawa until 2005
When He & wife Margaret moved to Victoria
- to be closer to their daughters
Sadly, Hart passed away on Jan 22nd 2009
Those who wish to can sign his guestbook here |
_________________________________________________
Allies Batter Pas de Calais Through Day
Jan. 21, 1944 - (AP) - Hundreds of Allied planes blasted
the French invasion coast today, following last night's R.A.F.-R.C.A.F.
raid on Berlin, the largest aerial attack ever made on the Nazi capital,
and German long-wave radio transmitters left the air tonight, possibly
indicating Berlin was under attack for the second successive night.
In a new attack cycle with reinforced strength, many types of R.A.F. planes
and United States heavy and medium bombers raked mysterious Nazi forward
defenses during the day in the Pas-de-Calais area.
Perhaps 2,000 tons of bombs crashed down on the French coast targets.
In its attack Thursday, night the R.A.F.- R.C.A.F., hit Berlin with more
than 2,300 tons.
Eleven Plants Smashed
A responsible informant in Stockholm said 11 war factories in the German
capital's east end were struck and the Borough of Neukoelln to the southeast
was badly damaged. Many Berliners with whom travelers talked said the
raid was the worst yet on the Reich's heart. They reported there were
at least 30 huge fires at one time, 11 of which still were blazing furiously
today.
In a combined announcement the Air Ministry and the United States Army
gave an unusual play-by-play of the day's operations against the Pas-de-Calais
area, which now has been attacked on 22 of the last 31 days and which
popularly is supposed to contain German rocket gun emplacements.
The announcement stated that when the first favorable weather in several
days arrived, the bombing was begun by R.A.F. Hurricane and Typhoon bombers.
These were quickly followed by United States medium bombers, braving flak
fields without loss. Bombs from R.A.F. Bostons, Mitchells and Mosquitos
then began to fall and two Mosquitos were lost in low-level bombing and
cannon attacks.
Topped Of by Heavies
United States heavy bombers delivered the final blow, while throughout
the attacks squadrons of Spitfires and Typhoons splattered enemy airfields
to keep Nazi fighter planes on the ground.
R.C.A.F. pilots escorting the American heavy bombers shot down two German
Focke-Wulf 190’s. F/O Hart Finley, of Westmount
Que. and P/O Claude Weaver of Oklahoma City,
Okla. were the successful pilots.
As dawn rose over England, watchers saw Spitfires, then RAF fighter bombers,
then United States medium bombers and finally large formations of United
States heavy bombers under escort cross toward military installations
in a 50-square-mile French zone. Returning aviators disclosed that the
Germans were heavily reinforcing the anti-aircraft defenses of the Pas-de-Calais
area, which now has been attacked on 22 of the last 31 days. Eight types
of bombers pressed home the attack all day against undisclosed targets
popularly supposed to be rocket-gun emplacements.
Few Fighters Up
Despite the heavy antiaircraft fire, few enemy fighters were reported
as the attack fleet, returning after a week's absence, sowed with bombs
the barricaded, forest-dotted promontory 25 miles across the Channel from
England.
Perhaps 2,000 tons of bombs crashed down on the French targets, which,
with more than 2,300 tons dropped by the RAF and RCAF on Berlin, made
an unusually heavy load of explosives and incendiaries dumped on the enemy
in less than 24 hours.
The 11th of a series of obliteration raids on Berlin was delivered by
an estimated 800 heavy bombers, including nine Canadian squadrons, which
unloaded an average of 77 tons of bombs each minute during the half-hour
attack. The previous record load was the 2,300-ton bombing of Berlin Nov.
22.
Thirty-five bombers, including Canadian, failed to come home as the Germans
made frantic efforts to save their capital.
The big bomber fleet took off from England in the late afternoon 18 days
after the last attack. First a group of swift, twin-engined Mosquito bombers
laid down a feint bombardment of Northwest Germany. Then the "heavies"
came in, plowing through overcast weather that hampered Nazi fighters
but failed to interfere with Allied aim. German fighters made flare-paths
in the sky and occasional rocket-shells burst like big balls of fire.
As the bombers ran in and unloaded, flames licked the sky from the burning
city, and clouds flickered with light from the block-busters exploding
below.
Gigantic Fires Started
Many fliers minimized the opposition they encountered. They said: "Jerry
simply wasn't there. It wasn't like the Jerry we've run into before."
Others called the antiaircraft barrage "loose" and said the
nightfighters were "late."
But the losses—second highest of the campaign against Berlin—made
clear the Germans were fighting back, and Swedish reports said the Germans
had steadily augmented their anti-aircraft batteries in an attempt to
save what was still left of Berlin.
Gigantic new fires started, belching smoke thousands of feet into the
air. One unconfirmed report said the Friedrichstasse Station in central
Berlin was hit and surrounding area devastated, dislocating traffic and
reducing bus service this morning to skeleton service.
The Canadian force, made up of Lancaster and Halifax bombers, dropped
the heaviest bomb loads since the Canadian bomber group was formed a little
more than a year ago.
It was the operational debut of the group's newest squadron —the
Porcupine— which has been adopted by the Township of Tisdale and
Timmins, on Northern Ontario's famed Porcupine gold mining district. An
English wing commander, C. B. Sifton, D.F.C., who enlisted in the R.C.A.F.
at Vancouver, led the squadron. Other squadrons in the raid included the
Thunderbird, Leaside, Iroquois, Bluenose, Lion, Goose, Bison and Ghost.
_________________________________________________
FINLEY, F/L Hartland Ross (J14030) - Distinguished
Flying Cross - No.443 Sq.
Award effective 10 July 1945 as per London Gazette dated 24 July 1945
and
AFRO 1619/45 dated 19 October 1945.
Flight Lieutenant Finley has destroyed four enemy aircraft
and damaged one more. In addition, whilst leading low level attacks he
has destroyed one enemy aircraft and damaged three more on the ground.
He has always shown courage and determination on all his sorties despite
heavy opposition from anti-aircraft fire. Flight Lieutenant Finley has
at all times shown skill and devotion to duty of the highest order.
_________________________________________________

Sept. 1943. Andy MacKenzie (L front) &
pilots of 403 Sq. investigate a Sherman tank.
That's Hugh Godefroy in R front position &
Hart Finley behind him in the turtleneck.
_________________________________________________
Victories Include :
30 Dec 1943
21 Jan 1944
30 June 1944
23 April 1945
25 April 1945
2 May 1945 |
one Bf.109
one Bf.109
one Bf.109
one FW.190
one FW.190
two Ju.87s
one unID'd e/a
1/2 Ju.88
|
destroyed
destroyed
damaged
destroyed
destroyed &
damaged &
damaged
destroyed
|
403 Squadron
403 Squadron
403 Squadron
403 Squadron
all OTG, 443 Sq.
443 Squadron
|
_________________________________________________
|