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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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Contributed by听
大象传媒 LONDON CSV ACTION DESK
People in story:听
Charles John (Jim) Bossley
Location of story:听
Ceylon
Background to story:听
Royal Air Force
Article ID:听
A5269539
Contributed on:听
23 August 2005

This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War site by Pennie Hedge, a volunteer from 大象传媒 London, on behalf of Charles John Bossley and has been added to the site with his permission. Mr Bossley fully understands the site鈥檚 terms and conditions.

I came back to England from Algiers, and the unwritten law in the RAF was that if you鈥檇 been abroad, you had to be in England for at least 12 months before you went out again. I was here 12 months and 1 day. I was stationed in Buckinghamshire, a training unit there - Wellington Bombers again, flying control again. And from there I was shipped up to Blackpool. The first bloke I met, walking along the platform, was a bloke I鈥檇 been abroad with for two years. 鈥淲hat, you up here as well?鈥 鈥淵es.鈥 鈥淲hat are we doing up here?鈥 鈥淒unno.鈥 We鈥檙e going to India. They ship us out to India, South East Asia Command.

So we landed in Bombay. Sat there for about a fortnight. He went one way, I went another, to Bangalore. Was up there about three or four months. Putting up transmitter aerials and god knows what else. Then down to Ceylon. 鈥淭ake a party down to Ceylon.鈥 I was promoted to Corporal. So I goes down there and we finds this airfield, which had been built in the middle of a coconut plantation, in billets, and VHF airfield control. But in the meanwhile, two miles away you have on the edge of a hill, what they call a homing station. Aircraft get lost and they call 鈥淢ayday鈥. It鈥檚 an emergency channel. Its always open. It even exists today. So if a pilot鈥檚 lost he starts transmitting for 10 seconds and if you pick him up, you can give him a course to steer. If he listens to what you鈥檙e telling him, you can bring him right back. It鈥檚 a navigational aid. So I look after that until such time as I get demobbed.

But what a lot of people don鈥檛 know is that we have a strike out there. Simply because they were getting behind with the demob numbers, and we were well overdue. It was because by now the only replacements they had were the call up boys on the two years thing.

And we all refused work. The only person who didn鈥檛 was me. Because of the emergency setup. What happened was, they speeded it up, they brought in an aircraft carrier, and they took all the aircraft out, and in all the aircraft hangars below they put bunks. It was the HMS Indefatigable, and she was granted the Freedom of the Borough of Holborn. But they scrapped it two months after we come home. And I can鈥檛 understand it. It was a beautiful aircraft carrier. The crew said she was the first British aircraft carrier in Tokyo Bay, but I don鈥檛 know. So I was demobbed in December 1946. But they owed me so much leave that I didn鈥檛 have to do anything for the last 84 days.

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