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Flying Nightingales remembered

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Flying Nightingales remembered

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Old 14th Jun 2024, 12:04
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Flying Nightingales remembered

Posted for interest. It's outside mainstream D-Day really so started this. There's also a news clip on BBC i-player - Points West evening news on 13/6 about 2/3rds through. https://www.raf.mod.uk/news/articles...d-80-years-on/

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Old 14th Jun 2024, 12:30
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‘The Flying Nightingales’

‘Good God!’

This was the incredulous reaction from the beachhead master when Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) Nurse Iris Bower arrived on Juno Beach early on 11 June 1944. With fellow nurse, Mollie Giles, she travelled on a tank landing craft, becoming one of the first women to set foot on the D Day beaches. She was later awarded an MBE for her work.



Originally Posted by Hot 'n' High
Posted for interest. It's outside mainstream D-Day really so started this. There's also a news clip on BBC i-player - Points West evening news on 13/6 about 2/3rds through. https://www.raf.mod.uk/news/articles...d-80-years-on/

https://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/blog/flying-nightingales/




Corporal Lydia Alford and LACWs Myra Roberts and Edna Birkbeck; each travelling in an RAF Douglas Dakota.

Two days after Iris, three nursing orderlies departed from RAF Blakehill on the first casualty evacuation flights to Normandy.

It was 13 June, one week since D Day.

The moment of their return was captured by an official RAF photographer.

The welcoming party of newspaper correspondents dubbed them the ‘Flying Nightingales’ and the name stuck.

They were the first British women on active service to be flown into a war zone.





Cpl Lydia Alford (L), and LACWs Myra Roberts (C) and Edna Birkbeck (R), were the first three nursing orderlies of the Woman's Auxiliary Air Force to fly to France

BBC

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c6pp46vkqv5o





Last edited by Deep Throat; 14th Jun 2024 at 12:45.
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