Lot

48

'One of Bassett's introductions to operational flying was hair-raising. On 30 November 1943, Sh...

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'One of Bassett's introductions to operational flying was hair-raising. On 30 November 1943, Shulemson was piloting one of five aircraft from his squadron which were attacking a convoy off Sogne fjord with 25lb. rockets when his Beaufighter was hit in the starboard wing and fuselage by 30mm. shells fired by an M-class minesweeper. Shulemson had trimmed his aircraft nose-heavy for the attack and one of the shells severed the control wire. He could not pull his aircraft out of the dive until Bassett rushed forward and helped him to heave back the control column. They flew back to Wick with some difficulty. The same shell killed their homing pigeon, rather unpleasantly, a bird that Bassett liked and had dubbed 'Binder'. These pigeons had been known to save the lives of downed airmen and the Canadians awarded poor Binder a mock D.F.C. in a mock ceremony that evening.'

The Strike Wings, by Roy Conyers Nesbit, refers.


A particularly fine Second World War Coastal Command D.F.C. group of five awarded to Flight Lieutenant P. R. Bassett, Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, a long-served Navigator in Beaufighters of No. 404 'Buffalo' Squadron who carried out a spate of spectacular anti-shipping strikes in 1943-44

His story - and that of his pilot Flight Lieutenant S. S. 'Slippery Sid' Shulemson, D.S.O., D.F.C. - is recounted in the pages of The Strike Wings
, a story imbued with dogged determination and high valour: on one occasion they somehow survived a 20-minute combat in which their aircraft was left 'riddled with cannon and machine-gun holes'

Distinguished Flying Cross, G.VI.R., the reverse officially dated '1945', in its Royal Mint case of issue; 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star, clasp, France and Germany; Defence and War medals, M.I.D. oak leaf, good very fine (5)



D.F.C. London Gazette 6 February 1945. The original recommendation states:

'During the whole of his operational flying, Flight Lieutenant Bassett has been navigator to Flight Lieutenant Shulemson, D.S.O., and with him has completed 45 sorties and a total of 179 operational hours, including no less than 12 successful anti-shipping strikes on the Norwegian, Dutch and Bay of Biscay coasts.

His direction of his pilot on these strikes has contributed materially to the success of these operations. His has frequently been the responsibility of navigating the Squadron, and on occasions the whole Wing, very often in difficult weather conditions - a task he has always carried out with the greatest efficiency. He has further on many occasions secured most valuable photographs of the target permitting accurate identification and providing proof of damage inflicted on it.

On 26 January 1944, Flight Lieutenant Shulemson attacked a single-engined fighter which itself was attacking another aircraft of the formation, whereupon the fighter turned its attention to Flight Lieutenant Shulemson's aircraft. During the ensuing combat which lasted 20 minutes, Flight Lieutenant Bassett so skilfully directed his pilot in evasive action that both aircraft were enabled to return to safely to base, without injury to the members of either crew and with the minimum of damage to their aircraft.

During the whole of his tour of operations, now completed, this Navigator has shown outstanding devotion to duty, and his courage in the face of the enemy has been of the highest order. I highly recommend him for the award of the Distinguished Flying Cross.'

Peter Raymond Bassett qualified as a Navigator in Canada and joined No. 404 (R.C.A.F.) Squadron in October 1943, after attending an O.T.U. at Catfoss, Yorkshire. As related in The Strike Wings, his journey to an operational footing had been blessed by a stroke of good luck:

'During October [1943] Shulemson was assigned an English navigator, a 22-year-old ex-bank clerk from Surrey, Flying Officer Peter R. Bassett. Although it was the policy of the R.C.A.F. to appoint their own nationals to their squadrons, there was a shortage of navigators who were also trained as wireless operators. By rights, Bassett should not have been flying at all, for his eyesight was below the high standard required by the R.A.F. He had joined the R.A.F. in February 1941 and had trained as a ground wireless operator at Blackpool and Yatesbury, but in the Spring of 1942 he tried again to remuster as aircrew. In the course of his medical examination, the optician was called out of the room, perhaps rather conveniently, for Bassett leapt to his feet and memorised the second and third lines from the bottom of the chart. He passed, and was posted to Canada, where he took his air navigator's course at Poer Albert in Ontario and his general reconnaissance course at Prince Edward Island. On his return home he was posted to No. 404 Squadron.'

A Coastal Command unit, 404 'Buffalo' Squadron was based at Wick in Scotland, from whence it carried out escort duties and anti-shipping strikes, more often than not off the Norwegian coast. Teaming-up with Flying Officer S. S. 'Slippery Sid' Shulemson as his pilot, Bassett flew his first operational sortie in October 1943; the Squadron's Beaufighters had recently been equipped with rocket projectiles (R.P.s).

On the 22 November, in another anti-shipping strike off the Norwegian coast, Bassett and Shulemson attacked three enemy M.Vs with rockets. Their next sortie, flown on the 30th - as cited above - resulted in much flak damage and the demise of their carrier pigeon 'Binder'.

On 10 December 1943, No. 404's Beaufighters were detailed to escort M.T.B. 684 of the Royal Norwegian Navy on its return trip from a special mission to Sogne fjord. Having located the M.T.B., Shulemson and Bassett ran into a Ju. 88. The latter enthusiastically engaged it from his cupola with the .303 belt-fed Browning until Shulemson managed to manoeuvre their Beaufighter onto the Ju. 88's tail and obtain some cannon shell hits. The enemy aircraft then disappeared into cloud and pilot and Navigator resumed their sortie.

An unequal contest of 20 minutes duration: 'riddled with cannon and machine-gun holes'

On 26 January 1944, six of 404's Beaufighters - and six from No. 144 Squadron as anti-flak escort - took off from Wick to their favoured hunting ground of Stadlandet. Shulemson and Bassett led the way, the aircraft skimming just above the waves in a large vic formation. An enemy convoy having been sighted at 1132 hours, Shulemson gave the order to attack, 404's rockets being delivered with devastating results: severe damage was inflicted on the submarine chaser UJ 1702, the minesweeper M. 154 and the flak ship Vp. 5908. The action over, the Beaufighters turned at mast height and broke away north. Shulemson, however, headed south, to get photographs of one of his earlier victims, a beached merchantman.

By the time he rejoined his homeward bound formation, it was under attack from four Me. 109s, two of which had fastened on to the tail of a 144 Squadron Beaufighter flown by Flying Officer B. A. Sansom: their cannon fire was ripping holes in the fuselage and wings. As Wing Leader, Shulemson did not hesitate in going to Samson's rescue. One of the 109s broke off its attack but the other turned on Shulemson as he engaged it from 600 yards. The Strike Wings takes up the story:

'Then began a grim and unequal duel. Shulemson flew in as tight a circle as possible, with the Messerschmitt trying to turn inside him and close on the tail of the Beaufighter. Each time the German lined up for the attack, Bassett shouted a warning and Shulemson flipped his Beaufighter around, so that the circling began in the other direction. At one point, Bassett was able to fire a short burst from his .303 Browning, without appar...
'One of Bassett's introductions to operational flying was hair-raising. On 30 November 1943, Shulemson was piloting one of five aircraft from his squadron which were attacking a convoy off Sogne fjord with 25lb. rockets when his Beaufighter was hit in the starboard wing and fuselage by 30mm. shells fired by an M-class minesweeper. Shulemson had trimmed his aircraft nose-heavy for the attack and one of the shells severed the control wire. He could not pull his aircraft out of the dive until Bassett rushed forward and helped him to heave back the control column. They flew back to Wick with some difficulty. The same shell killed their homing pigeon, rather unpleasantly, a bird that Bassett liked and had dubbed 'Binder'. These pigeons had been known to save the lives of downed airmen and the Canadians awarded poor Binder a mock D.F.C. in a mock ceremony that evening.'

The Strike Wings, by Roy Conyers Nesbit, refers.


A particularly fine Second World War Coastal Command D.F.C. group of five awarded to Flight Lieutenant P. R. Bassett, Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, a long-served Navigator in Beaufighters of No. 404 'Buffalo' Squadron who carried out a spate of spectacular anti-shipping strikes in 1943-44

His story - and that of his pilot Flight Lieutenant S. S. 'Slippery Sid' Shulemson, D.S.O., D.F.C. - is recounted in the pages of The Strike Wings
, a story imbued with dogged determination and high valour: on one occasion they somehow survived a 20-minute combat in which their aircraft was left 'riddled with cannon and machine-gun holes'

Distinguished Flying Cross, G.VI.R., the reverse officially dated '1945', in its Royal Mint case of issue; 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star, clasp, France and Germany; Defence and War medals, M.I.D. oak leaf, good very fine (5)



D.F.C. London Gazette 6 February 1945. The original recommendation states:

'During the whole of his operational flying, Flight Lieutenant Bassett has been navigator to Flight Lieutenant Shulemson, D.S.O., and with him has completed 45 sorties and a total of 179 operational hours, including no less than 12 successful anti-shipping strikes on the Norwegian, Dutch and Bay of Biscay coasts.

His direction of his pilot on these strikes has contributed materially to the success of these operations. His has frequently been the responsibility of navigating the Squadron, and on occasions the whole Wing, very often in difficult weather conditions - a task he has always carried out with the greatest efficiency. He has further on many occasions secured most valuable photographs of the target permitting accurate identification and providing proof of damage inflicted on it.

On 26 January 1944, Flight Lieutenant Shulemson attacked a single-engined fighter which itself was attacking another aircraft of the formation, whereupon the fighter turned its attention to Flight Lieutenant Shulemson's aircraft. During the ensuing combat which lasted 20 minutes, Flight Lieutenant Bassett so skilfully directed his pilot in evasive action that both aircraft were enabled to return to safely to base, without injury to the members of either crew and with the minimum of damage to their aircraft.

During the whole of his tour of operations, now completed, this Navigator has shown outstanding devotion to duty, and his courage in the face of the enemy has been of the highest order. I highly recommend him for the award of the Distinguished Flying Cross.'

Peter Raymond Bassett qualified as a Navigator in Canada and joined No. 404 (R.C.A.F.) Squadron in October 1943, after attending an O.T.U. at Catfoss, Yorkshire. As related in The Strike Wings, his journey to an operational footing had been blessed by a stroke of good luck:

'During October [1943] Shulemson was assigned an English navigator, a 22-year-old ex-bank clerk from Surrey, Flying Officer Peter R. Bassett. Although it was the policy of the R.C.A.F. to appoint their own nationals to their squadrons, there was a shortage of navigators who were also trained as wireless operators. By rights, Bassett should not have been flying at all, for his eyesight was below the high standard required by the R.A.F. He had joined the R.A.F. in February 1941 and had trained as a ground wireless operator at Blackpool and Yatesbury, but in the Spring of 1942 he tried again to remuster as aircrew. In the course of his medical examination, the optician was called out of the room, perhaps rather conveniently, for Bassett leapt to his feet and memorised the second and third lines from the bottom of the chart. He passed, and was posted to Canada, where he took his air navigator's course at Poer Albert in Ontario and his general reconnaissance course at Prince Edward Island. On his return home he was posted to No. 404 Squadron.'

A Coastal Command unit, 404 'Buffalo' Squadron was based at Wick in Scotland, from whence it carried out escort duties and anti-shipping strikes, more often than not off the Norwegian coast. Teaming-up with Flying Officer S. S. 'Slippery Sid' Shulemson as his pilot, Bassett flew his first operational sortie in October 1943; the Squadron's Beaufighters had recently been equipped with rocket projectiles (R.P.s).

On the 22 November, in another anti-shipping strike off the Norwegian coast, Bassett and Shulemson attacked three enemy M.Vs with rockets. Their next sortie, flown on the 30th - as cited above - resulted in much flak damage and the demise of their carrier pigeon 'Binder'.

On 10 December 1943, No. 404's Beaufighters were detailed to escort M.T.B. 684 of the Royal Norwegian Navy on its return trip from a special mission to Sogne fjord. Having located the M.T.B., Shulemson and Bassett ran into a Ju. 88. The latter enthusiastically engaged it from his cupola with the .303 belt-fed Browning until Shulemson managed to manoeuvre their Beaufighter onto the Ju. 88's tail and obtain some cannon shell hits. The enemy aircraft then disappeared into cloud and pilot and Navigator resumed their sortie.

An unequal contest of 20 minutes duration: 'riddled with cannon and machine-gun holes'

On 26 January 1944, six of 404's Beaufighters - and six from No. 144 Squadron as anti-flak escort - took off from Wick to their favoured hunting ground of Stadlandet. Shulemson and Bassett led the way, the aircraft skimming just above the waves in a large vic formation. An enemy convoy having been sighted at 1132 hours, Shulemson gave the order to attack, 404's rockets being delivered with devastating results: severe damage was inflicted on the submarine chaser UJ 1702, the minesweeper M. 154 and the flak ship Vp. 5908. The action over, the Beaufighters turned at mast height and broke away north. Shulemson, however, headed south, to get photographs of one of his earlier victims, a beached merchantman.

By the time he rejoined his homeward bound formation, it was under attack from four Me. 109s, two of which had fastened on to the tail of a 144 Squadron Beaufighter flown by Flying Officer B. A. Sansom: their cannon fire was ripping holes in the fuselage and wings. As Wing Leader, Shulemson did not hesitate in going to Samson's rescue. One of the 109s broke off its attack but the other turned on Shulemson as he engaged it from 600 yards. The Strike Wings takes up the story:

'Then began a grim and unequal duel. Shulemson flew in as tight a circle as possible, with the Messerschmitt trying to turn inside him and close on the tail of the Beaufighter. Each time the German lined up for the attack, Bassett shouted a warning and Shulemson flipped his Beaufighter around, so that the circling began in the other direction. At one point, Bassett was able to fire a short burst from his .303 Browning, without appar...

Orders, Decorations and Medals

Sale Date(s)
Venue Address
67-69 Southampton Row
Bloomsbury
WC1B 4ET
London
WC1B 4ET
United Kingdom

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Important Information

SALEROOM NOTICES:

Lot 56: The recipient was also Mentioned in Despatches (London Gazette 1 January 1945, refers) and is sold together with her emblem.

Lot 285: Official replacements throughout 

Lot 326: The Lot is now accompanied with the recipient’s original Memorial Scroll

Lot 373: Withdrawn. The Lot has been withdrawn from the Sale and has kindly been returned to the recipient by the vendor having been lost in 2015.

Lot 561: This lot is NOT subject to 5% import duty. 

Lot 580: Print catalogue erroneously lists this item as lot 579 

Lot 595: 

Accompanied with an important original archive comprising;

-          The recipient’s identity tag worn at Goose Green

-          Parachute Regiment No. 2 Dress with General Service riband and belt, the first named

-          A poignant painted tile depicting the recipient with his tours of Northern Ireland either side

-          Three British Army football trophies

Two Regimental ties

Lot 648: The set comprises a 1st Class Badge and 2nd Class Star

Lot 670: Withdrawn

Lot 754: Sold as viewed 

Lot 791: Centre depressed and loose but still present. Revised estimate £70 - £90

 

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