Friday 8 November 1918 – Ascq Aerodrome

42 Squadron RAF only arrived at Ascq Aerodrome on 22 October 1918, and would be leaving in three days time.  Among Greg’s collection are two photographs of him and a few fellow officers, taken on the airfield, with some still identifiable houses behind them.  Meanwhile, the everyday business of B Flight  – reconnaissance and counter-battery patrols and a shoot  – continues.  As it turned out, these would be the last counter-battery patrol and the last shoot flown by the flight in the war.  Greg did not fly today.

B Flight Orders

B Flight Orders

B FLIGHT ORDERS FOR 8.11.1918:-
2707 10.00 12.30 Lt Judd       Lt Elliott  RECON & CBP
4889   when fit  Lt Bon        Capt Gordon   SHOOT
                 Lt Sewell     Lt Whittles  NEXT JOB
                 Lt Wallington Lt Bett       - do –

E27 will be ready to leave the ground at 630.

                             Wm. Ledlie, Capt.

 

Ascq Aerodrome

The Anciens Aerodromes website pinpoints the site of Ascq aerodrome as being just south of the junction of the Rue des Fusilés and the Rue de la Tradition/Rue Gaston Baratte.  The road junction is itself only a few hundred yards/metres southwest of the centre ville of Ascq itself, as can be seen on this embedded Google map:

Today, the site of the airfield is mostly an industrial estate, with a bit of scrubland and some allotment land – with what looks like an asparagus bed on the right! –

Photo of the site of Ascq aerodrome, June 2018
The site of Ascq aerodrome, June 2018. Looking south from the Rue de la Tradition towards the marker in the Google map, above. Click for larger image.

Photos with the Rue des Fusilés in the Background

Here are the two photographs of Greg and others.  They are taken with buildings on the Rue des Fusilés  being visible behind them.

The first:

Greg (second from left, front row) and others on the airfield at Ascq.
Greg (second from left, front row) and others on the airfield at Ascq. Third from left in the front row is probably Capt. Bill Ledlie. Click for larger image. Credit: Greg’s War Collection

The houses on the left of the group are still there, on the Rue des Fusilés, although somewhat altered and built around:

Houses on the Rue des Fusilés in June 2018
Houses on the Rue des Fusilés in June 2018. The cream house on the left and the red-roofed building, since refashioned but recognisable by its chimneys, were there in 1918. Click for larger image

And the second, probably taken on the same occasion:

Photo of Greg (on the right in the back row) and others on the airfield at Ascq
Greg (on the right in the back row) and others on the airfield at Ascq. Seated in the middle in the in the front row is Capt. Bill Ledlie. Click for larger image. Credit: Greg’s War Collection

Note the house with the patterned roof, visible between the observer standing on the left and other other five.  It is still quite conspicuous on the Rue des Fusilés:

Photo of house with pattered roof on the Rue des Fusilés in June 2018
House with pattered roof on the Rue des Fusilés in June 2018. Click for larger image
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