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Heathrow Harry 11th Feb 2016 15:29

John Mitchell DFC R.I.P
 
Churchill's navigator Air Commodore John Mitchell dies aged 97 - BBC News

Churchill's navigator Air Commodore John Mitchell dies aged 97

A member of Winston Churchill's personal flight crew during World War Two has died aged 97.

Air Commodore John Mitchell was the navigator on the prime minister's personal aircraft, called Ascalon.
He and the rest of the crew flew Churchill, codenamed "The Owner", to the Yalta and Tehran conferences.

Author Sean Feast, with whom Air Cmdr Mitchell collaborated on his 2009 autography, described him as a "remarkable man".

The London-born RAF volunteer had flown bombing raids over Germany and Italy early in the war and survived when his Armstrong Whitworth Whitley bomber ditched in the Channel while returning from Genoa on only his third mission.

'Witty and kind'


Air Cmdr Mitchell was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and spent a short time in the United States before returning in 1942 and being assigned to Ascalon. During that time he flew Churchill to the historic summit meetings at which Churchill, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and US President Franklin D Roosevelt decided the conduct of the war and how the post-conflict world would be divided up.

Mr Feast said: "It was only after I'd met John a few times through friends that he mentioned casually that he'd flown with Winston Churchill during the war. I knew then it would make a great story and so it proved. He was a lovely man in every way, witty, charming and kind. We would go to a pub in Boldre, near his New Forest home, and spend the afternoon laughing. He was one of life's characters."

As well as flying Churchill, Air Cmdr Mitchell also flew King George VI on several occasions and was later made a Lieutenant of the Royal Victorian Order (LVO). After the war he remained in the RAF as an instructor, a role which saw him fly over the North Pole, before being stationed in Moscow as an attaché, working in intelligence and rising up the ranks to Air Commodore.

The Bomber Command veteran retired to the New Forest town of Lymington in Hampshire.

AirportsEd 11th Feb 2016 20:18

Sad news HH, he was quite a character.
RIP Sir.

teeteringhead 12th Feb 2016 08:51

LVO DFC AFC and the US Legion of Merit.

Respect Sir and RIP.

Loved the bit in his obit in the paper this morning about "courting" his wife during the War. She was MI5, he was Churchill's Nav and neither could say what they did!

Must have been a lot of that then I guess.........

Courtney Mil 12th Feb 2016 10:39

Reposez en paix.

olympus 13th Feb 2016 14:52

His book is an interesting read.

Heathrow Harry 14th Feb 2016 09:30

Only met him a few times but he was an absolute gentleman - and didn't mind getting his hands dirty either


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