Sunday 7 July 1918 – Elevator Rocking Bar Shot

On a murky and misty day – “frightfully dud” was the verdict – Greg was down for a Counter Battery Patrol/Artillery Patrol in the morning but signalled that the weather was unfit.  He dropped one bomb, had an elevator rocking bar shot, made a bad landing and bust the prop.  Then he took another machine up, but the weather was still bad.

Log Book

Log BookLog Book

Date: 7.7.18 
Hour: 8.15 
Machine type: RE8 
No.: E27 
Passenger: Lt Pring 
Time: 30 mins 
Height: 1500 
Course/Remarks: CBP. V Dud.  Elevator rocking bar shot.
Date: 7.7.18 
Hour: 9.45 
Machine type: RE8 
No.: 2327 
Passenger: Lt Pring 
Time: 1 hr 10 m 
Height: 1500 
Course/Remarks: CBP. Very misty & cloudy.

Diary

Diary

Sunday July 7th 1918. Wrote AD [?]. Sent field card home.

8.15-8.45 Took off with four bombs.  Could only get one of them off.  Frightfully dud morning, low clouds and heavy mist.  Got the right hand elevator rocking bar shot.  Overshot on landing & ran into some boxes & broke propeller.  1 bomb.

9.15-11.0 Took up Hutchinson’s bus with a shoot.  Too dud. Good landing.

Squadron Records

The day’s flying is fleshed out a bit in the official report:

Squadron Record Book

Type and Number: R.E.8.27

Pilot and Observer: P. Lt Gregory. O. Lt Pring

Duty: Artillery Patrol

Hour of Start: 8.15am

Hour of Return: 8.45am

Remarks: 
8.30am 1-25lb bomb dropped at K.34.b.5.5. [Rue de Bournoville, Merville] Burst unobserved. 

8.35am sent U.L. U.R. U.D. C.8.  [Unfit for counter-battery work; unfit for artillery registration; unfit for photography; clouds at 800 ft] Very heavy ground mists and fog.  Machine hit on elevator rocking bar.  No E.A. A.A. or E.K.B.  [No enemy aircraft, anti-aircraft fire or enemy kite balloons]

Vis. very poor.  Obs. By P. & O.

Because there were no enemy aircraft and no anti-aircraft fire, it looks as if the rocking bar must have been hit with small arms fire from the ground.  Something of a lucky hit for the shooter at 1500 ft through cloud.

Type and Number: R.E.8.2327

Pilot and Observer: P. Lt Gregory. O. Lt Pring

Duty: Artillery Patrol

Hour of Start: 9.55am

Hour of Return: 10.55am

Remarks: 
10.0am small explosion at E.30.d.4.4. [La Couronne, between Vieux Berquin and Neuf Berquin] 

10.5am sent U.L. U.R. U.D. C.15.  [Unfit for counter-battery work; unfit for artillery registration; unfit for photography; clouds at 1500 ft] Clouds in places below 1200'. Very thick mist prevented observation. No E.A. A.A. or E.K.B.  [No enemy aircraft, anti-aircraft fire or enemy kite balloons]

Vis. very poor.  Obs. By P. & O.

Wrote AD [?]. Sent field card home.

So there was time left for correspondence.  Not sure who “AD” is – or even if it is AD.  If it were AG (which is just possible), it could be either Alice Gregory (Greg’s sister) or Albert Gertrey (Greg’s fellow student from flying training in Yatesbury).

Thursday 20 June 1918 – Merville Fever Strikes

With Lt Roche having contracted flu yesterday, today it was Greg’s turn to be struck down by ‘Merville Fever’.

Diary

Diary - Merville Fever Strikes

Thursday June 20th. Started with an attack of Merville Fever.  A sort of ’flu lasting three or four days.  Called P.U.O. (Placed Under Observation).

Had a letter from Kenneth & one from Alice. 

So no flying for Greg.  But two letters from the family in Holyhead must have cheered him up. 

Kenneth Gregory and Alice Gregory

Kenneth was an elder brother, a mining engineer who worked with their father managing the quarry on Holyhead mountain.  Alice was their sister, and a Queen Alexandra Nurse.  She was also, in Oscar Wilde’s memorable phrase, excessively pretty.

Alice Gregory, Greg’s sister, picking apples, probably in the orchard at the family home in Holyhead, North Wales. Click for larger image.  Photo: Greg’s War Collection
© Copyright 2018- Andrew Sheard and licensors. All rights reserved.