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OttawaRemembrance Day

WW2 veteran a living witness to history

Ron 'Shorty' Moyes, who took part in bombing raid on Hitler's mountain lair in waning days of Second World War, will spend Nov. 11 thinking of those who didn't come home.

Ron 'Shorty' Moyes served as tail gunner in fight for air supremacy over Europe

Ron 'Shorty' Moyes holds a model of the Halifax bomber in which he served as a tail gunner during the Second World War. Behind him is pictured a Lancaster bomber, in which he also flew. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

On Remembrance Day, and most other days, Second World War veteran Ron "Shorty" Moyesthinks of the thousands of Canadian airmen who never made it home.

He thinks of one man in particular, though they never met.

"I can see him. There was [another bomber] right beside us, he got hit, and the rear gunner dived out and he was waving at me like this as he was going down in his parachute,"Moyes recalled three-quarters of a century later from his cozy apartment at Ottawa's Perley Health.

"I think of him. I wonder if he made it all right or what happened."

Now 95, Moyes was just 17 and living on hisfamily's farm in Coquitlam, B.C., when he decided to leave school and follow his big brother Horace into the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF).

It was September 1943, and the air war overEurope was in full swing. His parents gave theirconsent, andoff the teenager went to basic training in Edmonton.

Because Moyes was just 17 when he enlisted in September 1943, his parents had to give their consent. (Submitted by Ron Moyes)

Training continued in Quebec, where Moyes graduated as a sergeant air gunner the following spring. With his new rank came a pay raise, from $35 a month ($15 of which went home to his parents for safekeeping) to the relatively rich sum of $3 aday.

In May 1944, Moyes and about 80 other gunners shipped out from Halifax. It was no pleasure cruise their quarters were canvas lean-toson the ship's top deck, where they slept in narrow, stacked bunks. They were ordered to man the vessel's anti-aircraft guns, a critical job since the troop ship, with 3,000 souls aboard, had no escort across the Atlantic.

Once safely in England, Moyeswassent to an operational training unit in Nottinghamshire, where the gunnerswere "crewed up" with the pilots, navigators, bomb aimers, wireless operators and engineerswith whom they were to spend the rest of the war.

It was Flying Officer Don Walkey who gave Moyesthenickname he'd keep for life.

"My pilot was six-foot-two. He said, 'Hi Shorty,' and that was it. The children and the grandchildren still call me Shorty. I haven't grown any!" Moyes joked.

Moyes's original crew, from left to right with ranks at the time of the photo: Sgt. Ron 'Shorty' Moyes, P/O Hugh Ferguson, F/O Don Walkey, P/O Stuart Farmer, Sgt. Alvin Kuhl and Flight Sgt. Jake Redinger. 'I thank the crew for having the opportunity to serve with such a great bunch, who were like brothers to me,' Moyes later wrote. (Submitted by Ron Moyes)

'You OK, Shorty?'

The six-man crew trained together in a twin-engine Wellington bomber until September. They were thensent to another base for instruction on "escape and evasion," including how to hide parachutes after bailing out, and the best way to approach a farmhouse behind enemy lines.

The crew soon began training on the four-engine Halifax bomber and was transferred to 429 Squadron at RCAF Station Leeming, near York. On Nov. 16, they received orders for their first bombing mission to the town of Jlichin the industrial Ruhr region of western Germany.

There were no comfortable seats ona Halifax, but the rear gunner's was perhaps the least commodious. With the Plexiglas windshield cut out for better visibility, winter temperatures at 5,000 to 6,500 metrescould drop to50 C. To stay warm, Moyes wrapped himself in a nearly impossible number of layers, including an electrically heated suit.

"It's all very well unless you have to go pee. We climbed into the turret and you don't get out till you land," Moyes said.

He was also isolated from the rest of the crew, sometimes for eight hours at a time. Every 30 minutes,Walkey would check in over the radio, asking, "You OK, Shorty?"

In fact, it was incredibly dangerous work: tail gunner on a heavy bomber is commonly said to have been the single deadliest job on the Allied side during the war. This was especially true after enemy fighters learned to attack from below, igniting the bomber's fuel tanks or detonating its payload.

The crew's first bombing mission was Moyes's first experience with anti-aircraft shells, or flak, which he likens to the sound of "somebody throwing stones" at the fuselage. Often, the extent of the damage couldn't be assessed until they'd returned to base.

"You never know how your undercarriage is until you land, so that was always a worry," Moyesrecalled.

30 missions

Thatmission was a success, the first of 30 for the crew, half aboard the Halifax and half aboard a Lancaster bomber after their transfer to an elite Pathfinder squadron. There were plenty of close calls along the way, however.

In late December, on another night raidover the Ruhrvalley, the crew was heading home when they picked up two German fighters. As the smaller planes worked in tandem to bring the bomber down, Walkeyhad to employ an evasive"corkscrew" manoeuvre, ducking in and out of clouds.This continued for an houruntil the bomber neared the English coast and the fighters gave up the chase and turned back.

I'll tell you now that I sure prayed we'd make it out of there. I imagine the rest of the crew did the same.- Ron Moyes

That New Year's Eve, on a mission to Norway they'd been tasked with dropping mines with alteredfuses into shallow water to confuse the Germans unseen anti-aircraft guns suddenly opened up from close range.

"We closed the door and all hell broke loose. You couldn't see the sky for tracer [fire]. The ships down there were firing like mad, and we got one big cannon hole right between the wireless air gunner and the navigator," Moyes said.

Moyesand the other gunner kept theirfingers on the trigger until theirgun barrels were white hot. At one point, Walkeywas forced to fly just metres above the surface of the fiord to evade the enemy fire.

"The bomb aimer told the pilot, 'Pull up, I can't swim!'" Moyes said.

It was dawn by the time they reached their base, and Moyes slept through New Year's dinner a meal he'd been looking forward to for days.

On a night raid over Nuremberg in March 1945, 29 Allied aircraftwere lost. "Aircraft seemed to be going down right and left," Moyes later wrote. "I'll tell you now that I sure prayed we'd make it out of there. I imagine the rest of the crew did the same."

Raid on Hitler's mountain lair

On April 26, 1945,the crew now with 405 Squadron embarked on their final bombing mission. The target was Adolf Hitler's vacation home near Berchtesgadenin the Bavarian Alps, and the German troops stationed in barracks there.

"Gen. [George] Patton was coming through and he wanted those SS troops out," Moyes said. The crew later learned Hitler hadn't been therewhen they dropped their bombs. Within days, the German dictator wasdead in Berlin.

As the war in Europe wound down, the missions changed. On May 7, Moyes's Lancaster took part in "Operation Manna," dropping food to starving Dutch civilians near Rotterdam. From an altitude of 100 metres, Moyes could see people waving as they ran to pick up the life-saving supplies.

A young Moyes in the rear gun turret of a Halifax bomber during the Second World War, left, and in the rear gun turret of a Lancaster bomber at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum around 2013, right. (Submitted by Ron Moyes)

Decades later in Ottawa, Moyeswould meet one of those Dutch civilians. "I was on the ground waving at you!" theman told him.

The next day, May 8 VE-Day the crew flew to Lbeck, Germany, to pick up allied prisoners of war. On the return trip, against all rules and regulations, Walkey altered his course to fly over London, opening the bomb baydoors to show the freed POWsBuckingham Palace below. Many of the menwept with joy.

Back at the airbase, the Canadians celebrated with wild abandon, firing flares into haystacks and setting the English countryside ablaze. "Of course, the Canadian government probably had to pay for [that]later," Moyes said.

Decades of service

By mid-June 1945, Moyes and his crew were on their way back to Canada. Four of them, including Moyes and Walkey, volunteered to continue fighting in the Pacific theatre, but as they were gearing up to go Japan surrendered and the war ended.

Moyeswas discharged thatSeptember. He tried his hand at civilian life, but working at a plywood mill was no match for the air force. In September 1946 he rejoined the RCAF, this time as an armorer, later specializing in explosive and bomb disposal. He married Margaret Winters on Valentine's Day 1948, and they had a son and a daughter.

His new career kept the young family on the move, and in 1962 Moyes was posted toa NATO airbase in Zweibrcken, Germany, home to a squadron of nuclear-armed aircraft. This was during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and Moyes was tasked with destroying the base's runway and other infrastructure in the event of a Soviet invasion.

Luckily, that never came to pass, but Moyes did soon count several Germans among his closest friends, making his peace with a former enemy.

The family returned to Ottawa, and in 1974 Moyes was discharged after 31 years with the RCAF to begina new career as a firearms technician withthe RCMP's forensic crimelab. He finally retired in 1989.

Eventually, the couple moved from their home in Ottawa's Carson Grove neighbourhood into an independent living unit at Perley Health, known until recently as the Perley and Rideau Veterans' Health Centre. Margaret Moyes died last year,and Ron Moyes now lives alonewith his bichon Tiffany.

Moyes with his dog Tiffany in the independent living apartment they share at Perley Health in Ottawa. 'I believe we all had a pretty good life and one which I'd do over again, if given the chance,' Moyes wrote in his memoir. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

Robert Moyes, who visits frequently and helped compile a detailed account of his father's war years, said he's always been in awe ofthe constant danger his dadfaced as he sat strapped intothat gun turret.

"You can't imagine people doing that today," he said. "The conditions back there must have been terrible."

Courtney Rock, director of development forthe Perley Health Foundation, said as well as being one of the Russell Road facility's most popular characters, Moyesis also a rare witness to history.

"One of the biggest privileges of working here is having those first-person accounts and those conversations, and I just recognize how fortunate we are to be able to listen to those stories, especially at this time of year," Rock said.

Moyes's bomber crew reunited several times in the years after the Second World War, but Shorty, the youngster among the six,is now the last man standing. He's also one of a dwindling number of veterans still able to recount those harrowing war stories.

As he attendsThursday's Remembrance Day ceremony at Perley Health, Moyes will be thinking of the rest of his crew, and of that unnamed Canadian airman who waved as he drifted toward an unknown fate below.