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Dam Busters' 50th Anniversary Events
Someone
at a high level in the MoD banned the Songs of Praise programme. There
was outrage in the local press and the nationals quickly picked up on
the story Throughout 1992 I was conscious of the fact that the following year
would be the 50th anniversary of the Dams' Raid and I felt sure that
Scampton would be involved in some way in whatever events were being
organised to mark the occasion. How wrong I was! When I made enquiries,
I discovered that the RAF had no plans at all to mark the anniversary. I
got in touch with the Dam Busters' Association to find out what their
plans were. I spoke to Squadron Leader Ted Wass, who was both the
Association's secretary and, as I learned when I got to know him, the
greatest living expert on all matters to do with the Dams' Raid although
he'd joined the Squadron in late 1943, shortly after it left Scampton.
Ted put me firmly in my place during our very first conversation when I
mentioned that we were considering how the station could celebrate the
50th anniversary of the Dams' Raid.
'Squadron Leader', he said gravely, 'We do not celebrate an event which
cost the lives of 53 of our colleagues and countless lives on the
ground'. I felt quite humble and I never made that mistake again.
I'd often wondered why the surviving Dam Busters aircrew never came on
visits to Scampton. When I asked Ted for the reason he eventually, and
rather reluctantly, admitted that they had not been made welcome the
last time they visited Scampton several years earlier.
Try as I might, Ted would not be drawn further on the subject except to
say that it went back to an
incident several years before I arrived at Scampton. I assured Ted that they would be
honoured guests in 1993 and at any other time.
Ted told me that the Association always held their annual reunion at the Petwood Hotel in Woodhall Spa, a beautiful country hotel in a quiet
village 18 miles south-west of Lincoln and about five miles from
Coningsby. The hotel had been requisitioned by the RAF in 1943 to serve
as 617 Squadron's Officers' Mess when the Squadron left Scampton almost
immediately after the Dams' Raid. There is now a well-known Dam Busters'
exhibition permanently on view in the hotel. The hotel certainly has
better accommodation and facilities than can be provided at Scampton so
I am sure they are better off there.
In spite of the fact that the RAF apparently was not intending to do
anything about it, the Station Commander, the Church of England Padre,
the Reverend Andy McMullen, and I thought that it would be very
appropriate for the 50th anniversary of such a well-known and nowadays
controversial war mission to be marked by means of a religious service
with a theme of reconciliation and forgiveness. Accordingly, on 10 March
1992 I sent the following fax to the BBC Television Songs of Praise office.
'16 May 1993 will be the 50th anniversary of the famous Dam Busters raid
by No 617 Squadron led by Wing Commander Guy Gibson who was awarded the
Victoria Cross for his part in it. The raid was mounted from this
station and the precise 50th anniversary occurs during your "on air"
time – the crews were briefing for the operation at about 7pm on 16 May
1993.
'I wonder if you would be interested in producing a "Songs of Praise"
from here to commemorate the event. I am in touch with the surviving
members of the crews who flew in the raid. We are considering various
plans at the moment including a concert with music provided by the
Central Band of the RAF in one of the large hangars that housed the
Lancaster bombers during World War 2.
'For your information, Richard Todd who played Guy Gibson in the film
"Dam Busters" lives locally. Guy Gibson's black Labrador dog, Nigger,
was killed in a road accident outside our main gate just a few hours
before the crews took off on the raid. Nigger's grave is here in front
of the hangar where it has always been, still tended carefully by a
local civilian.'
A few days later a fax came back from the Reverend Roger Hutchings,
Editor of Songs of Praise.
'You certainly persuade me that this is a suggestion we should consider
carefully. It would be particularly good to broadcast a live Songs of
Praise on the 50th anniversary and I am sure it would be very popular
with our viewers. The problem is this. We would not normally be
transmitting on 16 May, which is two weeks before Pentecost, when we
normally produce one special programme for that festival within our
repeat series, Praise Be! Thus a transmission on May 16 would mean a
considerable re-jigging of our schedules.
'I would like to find time to come and see the base, and a possible
venue, and to discuss the possibilities.'
Roger Hutchings visited Scampton some weeks later. Based on my
experience with the Friday Night is Music Night
band concert in 1991
which was broadcast live on BBC Radio 2, I was confidently able to tell
Roger that there was room in the hangar for 2,500 people including the
Central Band of the RAF. There would still be sufficient room for the
world's last flying Lancaster, from the Battle of Britain Memorial
Flight, and a Tornado from the present-day 617 Squadron, together with a
British Aerospace Red Arrows' Hawk and other Scampton-based training
aircraft, to form a colourful backdrop for the TV cameras. All the
surviving aircrew from the Dams' Raid, including some travelling from
New Zealand, Australia, Canada and USA, would be in the area for their
annual reunion and so could take their place in the congregation.
Roger was instantly sold on the whole concept. Then by happy chance came
an opportunity to include in the programme the other 'City of Lincoln'
aircraft. Two years after that first visit to Scampton by Lima Tango, an
entirely Lincolnshire-based crew of British Airways were, quite
independently, organising a charity flight for 250 disabled and
under-privileged Lincolnshire children. Lima Tango would return to
Scampton and take the children on a two hour flight including low level
flypasts over all the major towns and villages in the county. It soon
became apparent that the charity flight could be run on the same day as
the 50th anniversary 'Songs of Praise'. Lima Tango could be parked just
outside the hangar and the children and flight crew could be part of the
congregation. This would add an extra dimension to the programme.
With more than 10 months still to go, the Station Commander obtained the
approval of the Air Officer Commanding to go ahead with the plans and he
appointed me as the Project Officer. I had several meetings with the Dam
Busters' Association committee and together we started working out a
programme for the day. I put out a news release nationally inviting
people to contact me if they wished to be present. I gave a large number
of interviews on radio, TV and in newspapers. Letters started pouring in
asking either for more information or making firm bids for tickets. I
decided that I would have to give priority to those people with Scampton
or 617 Squadron connections. Although the tickets would be free, we
needed to issue them to specified persons for security reasons and to avoid over-crowding on
the day. Within four weeks I had allocated over 1000 tickets.
Then in July someone at a high level in the MoD banned the Songs of
Praise programme. I had to write several hundred letters telling people
that the event would not now take place. The BBC was
very disappointed. There was outrage in the local press and the national
newspapers quickly picked up on the story. Barely a month later the MoD gave in and announced
that the programme could go ahead after all. As the Sunday People
newspaper put it
in their edition of 9 August:
'We're delighted to report that a dotty decision by RAF chiefs has been
shot down in flames. Apparently anxious not to upset the Germans, the
defence bosses said it would be inappropriate for the BBC to do a live
show from the RAF base at Scampton. Now, after a bombardment of
criticism from ex-airmen, the MoD has done a smart about turn and the
programme will go ahead. Wizard prang!'
The Daily Express on 10 August gave the credit for the about turn to
Defence Secretary Malcolm Rifkind. Once again my word processor had to
work overtime as I sent out hundreds more personal letters advising
people that the event was back on. By early winter I had allocated all
2500 tickets. Letters continued to arrive by every delivery of post and
eventually I could not spare the time to answer each one individually so
I had to run off a standard letter saying that unfortunately there were
no more tickets. The number of requests was so great that it was quite
pointless trying to maintain a reserve list. Eventually word spread that
all the tickets had been allocated but there was still a trickle of
requests coming in as late as two weeks before the programme. I estimate
that I could have allocated over 6,000 tickets in all. Less than a dozen
people in total returned their tickets for re-allocation, and that was
mostly because they were unable to attend due to illness. In other
words, the 2500 lucky people who were allocated tickets were so
committed to the event that they put the date in their diaries months in
advance and made sure that nothing would prevent them from attending. Back to top
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