Ashburnham

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    • https://collections.westminster.org.uk/index.php/ashburnham

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      Ashburnham

      Ashburnham

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        Ashburnham

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          Ashburnham

            1032 People & Organisations results for Ashburnham

            GB-2014-WSA-10074 · Person · 1913-2001

            Jennens, Paul Kerr, son of Lionel Kerr Jennens and Beatrice Jefferis; b. 26 Sept. 1913; adm. Sept. 1927 (A); left July 1928; 2nd Lieut. Roy. Signals (TA) July 1939, Lieut. Feb. 1941, Maj.; dep. chairman and man. dir. Temple Press Ltd; m. 13 July 1940 Alison Mary, d. of A. L. Castleman; d. Apr. 2001.

            GB-2014-WSA-10064 · Person · 1904-1963

            Jenkins, Gilbert Lawrence Martin, son of Gilbert Henry Jenkins, of Chelsea, by Beatrice Estelle, daughter of Col. Martin James Langdon, of Swansea, Glamorgan; b. March 24, 1904; adm. Sept. 26, 1918 (A); left July 1921; A. R. I. B.A. 1929; in practice in London 1933-39; Directorate of Camouflage, Ministry of Home Security, 1940-4; asst. planning offr., Ministry of Town and Country Planning, 1945-50; senior planning offr., Ministry of Housing and Local Govt. since 1955; O.B.E. Jan. 1962; m. June 12, 1937, Kathleen Helen Mary, daughter of the Rev. Mark Edwin Johnson, Vicar of St. Anne, Highgate; d. 20 Feb. 1963.

            GB-2014-WSA-10021 · Person · 1891-?

            Jardine, Maurice Kirkpatrick, brother of Douglas James Jardine (q.v.); b. Sept. 30, 1891; adm. Sept. 28, 1905 (A); exhibitioner; K.S. Jan. 1907; left July 1910; Edinburgh Univ.; M.B. and Ch. B. 1920; temp. Surg.-Probationer R. N. V. R. May 8, 1916; served in Great War I in the Indian Medical Service in France, Gallipoli, and Egypt, and with the Grand Fleet 1916-9; Sen. Asst. Med. Officer Shirley Warren Infirmary, Southampton, 1923; Medical Superintendent, Borough Hospital, Shirley Warren, Southampton, 1930; visiting physician, Southampton Group of Hosps., 1949; Emeritus Physician 1957; m. Oct. 25. 1934, Gwendolen Violet, daughter of John Whalley Brown, of Bournemouth.

            GB-2014-WSA-10020 · Person · 1888-1946

            Jardine, Sir Douglas James, eldest son of James Jardine, M.B., of Richmond, Surrey, by Caroline Fanny, youngest daughter of John Hunt Gosling, of Richmond; b. Oct. 13, 1888; adm. as exhibitioner Sept. 25, 1902 (A); left (with Triplett) July 1907; Trin. Coll. Camb., matric. Michaelmas 1907; B.A. 1910; M.A. 1914; entered the Colonial Service as a clerk in the Chief Secretary's Office at Cyprus Nov. 1910; Asst. Secretary to the Government 1912-6; Secretary to the Administration of Somaliland 1916-21; accompanied mission to Abyssinia on the Coronation of Queen Zauditu 1917; in charge H. Q. Services, Somaliland Expeditionary Force, 1920; mentioned in despatches; Senior Asst. Secretary, Central Secretariat, Nigeria 1921; Govt. Secretary, Tanganyika, 1928-34; Governor of North Borneo 1934, and of Sierra Leone, 1937; British Representative on the Permanent Mandates Commission 1929-31; Governor of the Leeward Islands 1941; retired on account of ill-health 1943; Commander of the Order of the Most Brilliant Star of Ethiopia 1917; O.B.E. June 3, 1918; C.M.G. 1932; K.C.M.G. 1938; author of The Mad lvfullah of Somaliland (1923), and other works; m. 1st Jan. 21, 1913, Hilda Margaret, youngest daughter of Major John Edwards Werge Howey, of Chelsea; 2nd June 2, 1923, Jessie Mary, daughter of Lauchlan Andrew Macpherson, of Glen Urquhart, Inverness-shire; d. Dec. 11, 1946.

            James, Gordon Keith, 1909-?
            GB-2014-WSA-09980 · Person · 1909-?

            James, Gordon Keith, son of George Ernest James FRICS and Ada Elizabeth, d. of Henry Bulmer of Hampstead; b. 15 Sept. 1909; adm. Sept. 1923 (A); left Apr. 1927; Valuation Office, Inland Revenue; RM (E) 1942-5; FAI 1949, FRICS 1970; m. 1st 27 Jan. 1942 Edith Mary, d. of John Gore of Blackheath; 2nd Blanche Edith, d. of Elias Nicholls of Walsall.

            GB-2014-WSA-09969 · Person · 1920-2002

            Jagger, Cedric Sergeant, son of Charles Sergeant Jagger MC ARA, sculptor, of Chiswick, and his first wife Violet Constance, d. of Thomas Charles Smith; b. 14 June 1920; adm. Sept. 1932 (A); left July 1938; RA in WW2; advertising man. ICI Ltd, retd 1972; chairman Civil Service Selec­ tion Boards 1975-86; JP (Hants) 1975; Freeman City of London 197 5; Liveryman Worshipful Company of Clockmakers 1980, Keeper of the Company's Collection 1980-8; author of Paul Philip Barraud 1968, Clocks 1973, Royal Clocks 1983, The Artistry of the English Watch 1988; m. 1st 22 Mar. 1952 Jane Angela, d. of James Hynds, co. director, of Maidenhead; 2nd 5 Apr. 1972 Christine Fergus, d. of Fergus Brown of Sevenoaks, Kent; d. Jan. 2002.

            Jacobs, Derek, 1917-1941
            GB-2014-WSA-09963 · Person · 1917-1941

            Jacobs, Derek, brother of Bryan Sydney Jacobs (qv); b. 20 Dec. 1917; adm. Sept. 1931 (A); left Dec. 1932; a cane merchant; PO RAFVR Oct. 1941, killed in action Dec. 1941.

            Derek Jacobs was born at Brighton, Sussex on the 20th of December 1917 the son of Sydney Jacob, a gentleman, and Ella Bonham (nee Collins) Jacobs of “Rosebriars”, 441, Woodham Lane, West Byfleet in Surrey. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from September 1931 to December 1932.
            On leaving school he worked as a traveller for a general merchant. He enlisted in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve where he trained as a Wireless Operator/Air Gunner and rose to the rank of Sergeant before being commissioned as a Pilot Officer on the 31st of October 1941.
            On the night of the 7th/8th of December 1941, Bomber Command dispatched 130 aircraft for an operation on Aachen. The headquarters building of the local Nazi party was to be used as the aiming point for the bombers. Weather conditions were difficult with only 64 aircraft having claimed to have dropped their bombs on the target. The Aachen railway goods yards were hit by three bombs during the raid with 7 houses being slightly damaged. There were no casualties on the ground.
            Derek Jacobs and his crew took off from RAF Scampton at 2.13am on the 8th of December 1941 in Hampden Mk I AE191 OL-Z for the operation. It was to be his sixth operation. Having dropped its bombs the aircraft was leaving the target area at a height of 17,000 feet when it was hit in the port engine by anti aircraft fire. Derek Jacobs was instructed by the pilot to send an SOS call and received a “fix” from RAF Heston. With flames coming from the damaged engine Anthony Parsons, the pilot, throttled the engine back and stopped the propeller, in an attempt to let the fire extinguisher put the fire out. When the fire was extinguished, but with only one engine still working, the aircraft began to yaw and was in danger of entering a flat spin. In order to prevent this Parsons shut down the starboard engine and stabilised the stricken bomber but, when he attempted to restart it, it failed. The crew had made two radio distress calls, one at 5.30am and the second at 6.08am, before they were forced to ditch in the North Sea near Walcheren Island at 6.40am.
            Air Sea Rescue boats were dispatched to look for them but found no trace of the missing aircraft and its crew.
            The crew was: -
            Sergeant Bernard Athelstan Basevi (Observer)
            Pilot Officer Derek Jacobs (Wireless Operator/Air Gunner)
            Pilot Officer Anthony Leslie Parsons (Pilot) (POW No. 39646 Stalag Luft III)
            Sergeant George Wiscombe (Air Gunner) (POW No. 24785 Stalag Luft III)
            The four members of the crew had all managed to climb into the dinghy but it was four days before they were rescued, during which time Bernard Basevi died from cold and exposure during the night of the 10th of December and was buried at sea the next morning. Derek Jacobs died on the 11th of December and the two surviving crew members also buried him at sea. The two survivors were picked up by a German convoy escort ship “Wuppertal”, some 15 miles to the south west of Heligoland at 1.45pm the following day and were taken to Cuxhaven Military Hospital where they were treated for frost bite and exposure.
            His father received the following letter dated the 23rd of December 1941: -
            “Sir, I am commanded by the Air Council to express to you their great regret on learning that your son, Pilot Officer Derek Jacobs, Royal Air Force, is missing as the result of air operations. Your son was wireless operator/air gunner of a Hampden aircraft which set out at 2.13am for action over Aachen, Germany, and has failed to return. Two wireless signals were received from the aircraft, one at 5.30am and the second, an S.O.S. call, at 6.08am. The Air/Sea Rescue Services were put into operation and searching continued throughout the day, but no trace could be found of any of the crew. Enquiries will now be made through the International Red Cross Society and if any news is received you will be at once informed. If any information regarding your son is received by you from any source you are requested to be kind enough to communicate it immediately to the Air Ministry. The Air Council desire me to convey to you an expression of their sincere sympathy with you in your present anxiety.”
            George Wiscombe wrote the following to his wife from prisoner of war camp in a letter dated the 16th of January 1943: - “..... engine trouble made us crash in the sea, the four of us getting away in the rubber dinghy unhurt apart from shock ..... Navigator Basevi died the third night and Jacobs as you know the following day. Saw land on morning of fifth day but were blown away soon after. P/O Parsons and myself picked up by German boat after 104 hours afloat. Treated very well and taken into Cuxhaven Military Hospital.”
            Anthony Parsons wrote the following letter to the Air Ministry from Dulag Luft dated the 3rd of May 1942: -
            “Dear Madam, I regret to say that P/O Jacobs, 112160, died on the night of Dec. 11th 1941 from shock, exposure and lack of fresh water. Sgt. Basevi passed away through the same causes, the previous night. They both died quietly and without pain, being unwounded. Please convey my sympathies to their families, and say that I did the little that I could for them, without avail.”
            Theirs was one of two aircraft lost during the raid.
            He is commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial Panel 33.

            GB-2014-WSA-09962 · Person · 1916-1996

            Jacobs, Bryan Sydney, son of Sydney Jacobs, jute merchant, and Ella, d. of John Churton Col­lins; b. 5 Oct. 1916; adm. Sept. 1930 (A); left Dec. 1932; City & Guilds Institute; electronics industry; RAF in WW2, p.o.w. (Holland) 1941; d. 15 Apr. 1996.

            GB-2014-WSA-09906 · Person · 1916-1990

            Iredell, John Charles Lesingham, son of Charles Edward Iredell MD MRCP and Isobel Hilda, d. of Harry Burrard Farnall of Auckland, NZ; b. 2 Apr. 1916; adm. Sept. 1929 (A); left July 1932; RA 1940-3 (Lieut.); an architect, ARIBA 1948; d. 28 July 1990.

            GB-2014-WSA-09905 · Person · 1922-1989

            Iredell, David Arthur, brother of John Charles Lesingham Iredell (qv); b. 3 Feb. 1922; adm. Jan. 1935 (A); left Dec. 1938; RAC 1941-6; King's Coll. Land., BA 1950; Building Employers' Confedn 1953-86; sec. Nat. Joint Consultative Committee for Building 1973-86; m. 15 Aug. 1967 Denise Hankey, lecturer, d. of Herbert Anthony Hankey, wireless pioneer; d. 10 May 1989.