Wow! i never new Godfrey saw so much action i only new he was in ww1
i havnt much time tonight so i will give you an easy one
Who's this German soldier?
regards Paul
Wow! i never new Godfrey saw so much action i only new he was in ww1
i havnt much time tonight so i will give you an easy one
Who's this German soldier?
regards Paul
Spike Milligan
Regards,
Jerry
Whatever its just an opinion.
Yes, Jerry well done
Who is this and what was he famous for?
Regards,
Jerry
Whatever its just an opinion.
John Pendlebury, Crete fame?
Looks a bit like David Sterling, creator of the SAS
George Gunn
Correct.
2nd Lt. George Gunn (1912-1941)
2nd Lieutenant George Ward Gunn MC of the 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, citation reads:
"On the 21st November, 1941, at Sidi Rezegh, Second-Lieutenant Gunn was in command of a troop of four anti-tank guns which was part of a battery of twelve guns attached to the Rifle Brigade Column. At 10.00 hours a covering force of enemy tanks was engaged and driven off but an hour later the main attack developed by about sixty enemy tanks. Second-Lieutenant Gunn drove from gun to gun during this period in an unarmoured vehicle encouraging his men and reorganising his dispositions as first one gun and then another were knocked out. Finally only two guns remained in action and were subjected to very heavy fire. Immediately afterwards one of these guns was destroyed and the portee of another was set on fire and all the crew killed or wounded except the Sergeant, though the gun itself remained undamaged. The Battery Commander then arrived and started to fight the flames. When he saw this, Second-Lieutenant Gunn ran to his aid through intense fire and immediately got the one remaining anti-tank gun into action on the burning portee, himself sighting it while the Sergeant acted as loader. He continued to fight the gun, firing between forty and fifty rounds regardless alike of the enemy fire which was by then concentrated on this one vehicle, and of the flames which might at any moment have reached the ammunition with which the portee was loaded. In spite of this, Second-Lieutenant Gunn's shooting was so accurate at a range of about 800 yards that at least two enemy tanks were hit and set on fire and others were damaged before he fell dead, having been shot through the forehead."
"Second-Lieutenant Gunn showed the most conspicuous courage in attacking this large number of enemy tanks with a single unarmoured gun, and his utter disregard for extreme danger was an example which inspired all who saw it. He remained undismayed by intense fire and overwhelming odds, and his gallant resistance only ceased with his death."
"But for this very gallant action the enemy tanks would undoubtedly have over-run our position."
Regards,
Jerry
Whatever its just an opinion.
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