EPISODE 349 WERE SWEATMAN AND MALLETT ON THE NAZI GHOST TRAIN LIBERATED BY BELGIAN UNDERGROUND SEPT. 2,1944?

EPISODE 349  WERE SWEATMAN AND MALLETT ON THE NAZI GHOST TRAIN,  SEPT. 2, 1944?

alan skeoch
May 22, 2021

Here we are suffering through a global pandemic that is shaking the world…killing millions.  Seems strange
to be remembering events of World War II that happened 77 years ago.   But thanks to Edouard Reniere our
thoughts have been cast back to the crew of the Blonde Bomber…HX 313, 424 Squadron, RCAF, # 6 Bomber
Group, Skipton one Swale, Yorkshire.  Night May 27-28, 1944.   I can write all these specifics from memory.

What I knew of that ill-fated bomber came from the amusing notes of Victor Poppa who
survived the crash.   My  cousin George Freeman was killed.  Other members of the crew
also survived and I knew little about their POW and EVADER experiences until a few days
ago (see Episode 348)

It seems Sweatman was aboard the Nazi Ghost train loaded in a boxcar with 50 or so POW’’s and
over 1,000 Belgian citizens including some Jewish citizens being sent to Ravensbruck concentration
(extermination) camp.

Neither Ken Sweatman nor Eric Mallett  are recorded as aboard the train, however. 
 

Lots of references to the Ghost train…here are a few.

alan
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Original artifact. Brown boxcar with light creating shadows from upper right corner.

Replica of a Holocaust train boxcar used by Nazi Germany to transport Jews and other victims during the Holocaust.

The Nazi Ghost Train is the popular name for a train that, at the beginning of September 1944, was intended to transport the political prisoners and Allied airmen held at Saint-Gilles prison in Brussels, to camps in Germany.

Role[edit]

The train was intended to transport the political prisoners and Allied airmen held at Saint-Gilles prison in Brussels, to camps in Germany. Its mission was thwarted by Belgian railway men who delayed the progress of the train for so long that, with the approaching Allies entering the city, the Germans abandoned the idea. They released the political prisoners (but not the Allied POWs) at Klein-Eiland/La Petite-Ile station in Brussels, using the train instead to take troops back to Germany. Note that ‘Ghost Train’ is something of a misnomer since both the Germans and (especially) the Belgian railway workers knew exactly where the train was at all times.[1]

Description[edit]

The train itself comprised thirty or so goods wagons formed up by the German SS troops at Bruxelles Midi Railway Station. It was occupied by 1,370 political prisoners[1] and 41 Allied airmen from Saint-Gilles prison, and destined for prison camps in Germany.[2]
The train had been scheduled to leave in the early morning of Saturday 2 September 1944 but was delayed by railway workers until nearly five o’clock in the afternoon. Further delaying tactics resulted in the train only getting as far at Mechelen that evening and then diverting to Muizen for water replenishment. On leaving Muizen station next morning, further problems (mostly due to sabotage) were encountered and the train eventually returned to Klein-Eiland/La Petite-Ile at 10:15 Sunday morning. More (deliberate) confusion resulted in the locomotive for the train being detached and no suitable replacement being found. Following negotiations with various officials, including the Red Cross, the political prisoners were released from the train at 12.30 and the Germans took the train over for their own troops that afternoon. The train only got as far as Schaerbeek that evening before it was shunted into the railway yards there. In the confusion, several wagons, including the one holding the POWs, were derailed and abandoned. The POWs escaped in small groups throughout the night.[1]


Minute-by-Minute Account of the Phantom Train

Summary of minute-by-minute peregrination of the “Ghost Train”

by Walter Verstraeten

Based upon:

  •  “Le Train fantôme (The phantom train)” from Lokker, Claude,  Des Bâtons dans les Roues, Brussels: MIM Fonds Ortelius, 1985, which is primarily based upon investigations made by Mr. Handeberg, Belgian Railway Personnel Management Inspector.
  • Speech held by René Ponty onNov. 7, 1944
  • Speech held one year later by René Ponty, during a commemorative service at Brussels-South Train Station

General info:

  •  Train mission number: 1.682508
  • Supposed to leave Brussels-South Train Station on Sept. 2, 1944 at 8:30 a.m. from tracks/platforms 14 and 15.
  • Trajectory planned: Brussels-South/Mechelen/Essen/The Netherlands/Germany.
  • Purpose: transport of 1370 Saint-Gilles political prisoners and allied airmen to German extermination camps. Nationalities included Belgians, French, Russians, Americans, Canadians and British.
  • Train under surveillance of SS-troops

The Ghost train denomination

Lokker states that the expression “Ghost Train” has been ill-chosen as the whereabouts of the train were known at all times during its peregrination and was constantly guarded by SS surveillance units. A better name could have been “Miracle Train”.

Deportation figures for the year 1944:

Deportations from Belgiumwere executed under the command of the Reichssicherheitshaupt-amt(General Office for the Security of the Reich). The men who staged this act of infamy included Straub, who was the leader of the SIPO-SD[1] (Security Police-Security Service), Reeder, who was Miltärverwaltungschef (head of military administration), General Jungclaus, who was Head of the Gestapo inBelgium) and von Falkenhausen.

Number of people transferred to concentration camps between April and September 1944

 

Date/month

 

 

Buchenwald

 

Sachsenhausen

 

Ravensbrück

 

Vught (H)

 

Neuengamme

April 16



798


May

1.857





June

544


193



Aug 8


170



Aug 10

827





Aug 30


250

131

1.703

Sep 1


130



Sep 4

800-900




The three phases:

The Ghost Train episode can be divided up in three distinct phases:

Phase 1: The train is prevented from leaving the Brussels-South Train Station and eventually takes off for Vorst-South Train Station on Saturday, Sept. 2 at4:50 p.m.

Phase 2:  The train drives to Muizen Train Station where it arrives at11:40 p.m.and on Sept. 3 at7:15 a.m.returns to Brussels- Klein-Eiland (Petit île) Train Station

Phase 3: The train arrives at Brussels-Klein Eiland (Petit île) Train Station at10:15 a.m.on Sunday, September 3, where the prisoners are released.

 Brussels-South Train Station:

 For ease of reading most names of stations etc. have been translated to English. In Dutch Brussels-South is called “Brussel-Zuid”, the French-speaking population of Brussels refer to this train station as the “Midi”.

The full minute-by-minute account

Phase 1

August 25 thru September 1, 1944

Both on August 25 and September 1, 1944 the Swedish ambassador, baron Knudse de Verchou, backed by the Red Cross helped by Count Berryer, asks the German ambassador, Mayr-Falkenberg, to abandon the plan to deport to Germany close to 5.000 political prisoners held in Belgian prisons. The request also includes the Jews remaining at the Mechelen Dossin Barracks awaiting transfer to the extermination camps.  General Jungclaus makes promises, but keeps his definite answer in consideration. In any case he makes it clearly understood that “heavy cases” will be sent toGermanyno matter what. In spite of this contact and the vague promises made, Jungclaus orders 130 women to be deported to Ravensbrück on September 1, 1370 Saint-Gilles prisoners on September 2 and another 800-900 men from the still occupied part of Belgium on September 4 to Sachsenhausen. Only the September 2 contingency will not reach the extermination camps. This is their story.

Night of Sept 1 – Brussels South Train Station

SS detachments roll in 32 boxcars destined to haul 1.370 political prisoners held at the nearby Saint-Gilles Prison toGermany

Sept. 2 – Saturday

 From 1:30 to 4:00 a.m.

The Saint-Gilles prisoners are awakened and herded together in the central court of the prison. Each prisoner is given two Red Cross parcels. To the prisoners this is the end of their dream of being liberated by the rapidly approaching allied troops.

4:00 a.m. thru 07:30 a.m.

The prisoners leave, walking between rows of machine guns. They are driven away in lorries. At Fonsny Avenue a truck holding women singing the Belgian national anthem is observed. As the lorries drive through the streets towards the train station, bits of paper snow from the lorries. They contain messages from the prisoners to their families, friends, and relatives not to lose hope and to keep the faith. Citizens pick up the bits of papers and will see to it that they get to the addressees.

Upon arrival at the platforms the prisoners are ordered inside the boxcars. They are from 85 to 105 in a boxcar. Peeking out through the cracks in the slats of the cattle wagons the prisoners can see their friends, relatives, and wives pass as they move on to the next boxcar.  A smothering heat starts soon building up quite rapidly inside the cars. Assistant manager Duverger audaciously neglects the German threats and starts opening the ventilation slots, so fresh air can get into the wagons. Through these slots messages are passed in both directions. Slips of paper are thrown out and picked up by patriots walking along Avenue Fonsny that borders the train yard. Verbal messages are passed on in both directions.

 7:30 a.m.

 Michel Petit, the assistant train station manager, and an active member of the resistance group M.N.B., notices that SS soldiers take up positions along tracks 14 and 15. He estimates there are between 150 and 175 SS-men in all on the platforms. A civilian has already informed him around6a.m.that the prison of Saint-Gilles is in the process of being evacuated. Michel Petit gives covert instructions to sabotage the locomotive requested for this action. He immediately sends out a message to the Laken resistance group, asking them to pass on the warning to all other resistance groups covering the Brussels-Antwerp railway trajectory. Informed that a German hospital train is being diverted via Denderleeuw to the Brussels-South train station, Michel Petit, assisted by a staff member, leaves his office to go and fix a dynamite charge onto rail switch no. 67.

07:40 a.m.

The Train Station Manager, Léon Petit, passes on the same information as his namesake Michel. Within a short period of time a resistance man shows up in Léon’s office, pledging the station manager to use all means at his disposal to keep the train from leaving, pending a possible positive answer from General Jungclaus. Petit assures the man that will be no problem, but requests him to go and find the train depot manager, Technical Inspector Piette, and ask him to slow down the delivery of the requested locomotive. No sooner is he informed than Piette passes on the instruction to engine driver Roelants. Without informing the Germans all locomotives dispersed over the marshalling yard are called to the railway depot.

Léon Petit’s office is earmarked as the central headquarters for the whole operation. From here a well-conceived priority sabotage plan will be executed in the course of the day. The actors primarily will be the railroad personnel and staff, aided by resistance people. Soon many resistance members, including the personal representative of Général De Gaulle, are coming and going. A violent intervention is considered, but dropped as it is realized that any such action will invariably entail carnage. The word is spread that the Germans are to be constantly and deliberately misinformed on the total of locomotives available.

As soon as the Fahrtnummer  1.682.508 (convoy number) for the prison train is communicated to Léon Petit, it is covertly passed on to the railway depot workshop. Now the sabotage acts can be accurately pinpointed onto the exact train engines. Now the scenario can be laid down in detail. Spare parts will get broken. Drivers can make themselves sparse or can disappear altogether or they can get hurt or ill. Unnecessary additional controls can be inserted in the day’s schedule to slow down the whole process. Locomotives can show up at the wrong places and “unfortunate” misinterpretations will certainly yield a lot of problems all over the marshalling yard. Imagination will be their only limit.

09.15 a.m.

A locomotive is requested from the depot. The depot reports that specific locomotive, a type 33, has broken down. As a matter of fact rendering the lubrication piping unusable has sabotaged locomotive no. 3302. Locomotive no. 1202 is now assigned, but it turns out to be suffering from a broken Westinghouse pump. The driver Georges reports sick and is replaced by Vanderveken. It becomes obvious to the Germans that the Belgians are deliberately slowing down the repair jobs. They order German mechanics to take over and the engine is soon fixed. However, as the locomotive leaves the depot it is sent off in the wrong direction and ends up in a totally different place somewhere on the marshalling yard. Atnoonit will be reported to still be there.

12:00 noon

 A locomotive towing a German freight train pulls in at Brussels-South. It is reassigned to the prisoner’s train. However, the locomotive is ‘inadvertently’ diverted to the Schaarbeek marshalling yard at the other end ofBrussels. Apparently there has been some misunderstanding at the carousel where trains can be sent off in different directions on different tracks.

2:00 p.m.

Driver Roelants requests to be replaced, as his shift has been completed. He is replaced by Delorme, who claims he still has to go and collect his wages (it is Saturday). He disappears from the depot and as it turns out stays away for two hours.

 2:15 p.m.

Georges’ replacement, Vanderveken, drags his feet as long as possible. Seeing this act cannot be kept up indefinitely, he enacts his tumbling from a locomotive and fakes to be wounded.

3:15 p.m.

 The Germans are completely at a loss and send an armed guard to the locomotive depot and start looking for Delorme. Eventually Louis Verheggen and Léon Pochet are ordered to drive the locomotive. Three SS-guards move into the engine house and take up positions behind the two engineers, their arms trained at their backs. They will remain there until the morning of September 3 at10:15 a.m., an 18-hour constant vigil as to the slightest movements of the drivers. In spite of that Verheggen and Pochet will manage to continue sabotaging the advance of the train during the whole trajectory.

3:30 p.m.

 Locomotive 1202 leaves the depot.

4:15 p.m.

Locomotive 1202 is attached to the row of 32 boxcars. The train is guarded by several German officers and between 150-175 SS-soldiers. A section of machine-guns has been mounted onto the anti-aircraft wagon. They are installed in such manner as to be able to direct their fire along both flanks of the train. Verheggen demands a brake test to be executed, in spite of the German workshop leader assuring him that this as already been done. Verheggen informs assistant manager Deweiger that he’ll do anything in his power to keep the train from passing the border. Deweiger runs along the train shouting the message to all prisoners as he passes each boxcar. In the meantime he picks up all little bits of paper thrown out of the boxcars (via the ventilation slots) by the prisoners. These little bits of paper contain messages to their families and relatives. Deweiger takes a great risk as the patrolling guards normally should shoot him for doing this, but somehow it doesn’t happen.  Assistant-chief Decoster addresses Verheggen to sign a work form. In reality he passes on a message that the French Resistance is counting on him and trusts him.

Departure of the train is now set at4:50 p.m.

Leaving the station, Verheggen notices that the signaller has set the all-clear sign for slow traffic to Ruisbroek. Profiting from the ignorance of the three guards he enters the marshalling yard on this wrong railtrack. The local assistant station manager stops him and after some discussion he is redirected toVorst. At Vorst-South Train Station, Vanderstricht, the assistant station manager, has been informed of the oncoming prisoner train, which is normally due to pass thru his yard at 4:55 p.m. He has put his signals in such way as to force a 72-wagon German freight train coming fromHalleand on its way to Brussels-South viaVorstonto the main track, thus blocking the Verheggen locomotive. Logically Vanderstricht manoeuvres the Ghost train locomotive onto a dead-end sidetrack.  Vanderstricht now starts concentrating on the 72-wagon train on the main track. In order to move it away, the locomotive needs to be brought from the head to the back of the row of wagons. Vanderstricht eventually splits up in the convoy in two parts. Discussions with the Germans leads to the decision to send the locomotive back on the reverse track. In the process an anti-aircraft wagon is attached to the train atVorst. Verheggen takes the opportunity to replenish his water supply.

Phase 2

September 2, 1944 – Saturday

 5:45 p.m.

The Ghost Train arrives at the Schaarbeek railway marshalling yard. In spite of the sign being in the “safe”-position, Verheggen brakes to a stop and intends to leave the engine’s cabin pretending to go and fetch a yard pilot. He is forced back inside the cabin and ordered to leave immediately. One of the guards assures him: ”Maschine kaput, du kaput!”  (Locomotive dead, you dead!).

At Vilvoorde the signs are in the “stop”-position. Verheggen secretly congratulates the clever signaller. It allows him to halt his train for a long period of time. The guards however soon get impatient and suspicious and order him to drive on in spite of the signs.

Driving into the Mechelen marshalling yard via Eppegem at around11 p.m., the signs are in “stop”-position there as well. This however is a normal situation, as the sign installation has been out of order since the latest allied bombing raid on Mechelen. The engineer needs to descend and phone to find out whether he can actually pass the signs. The guards again make a lot of fuss, but realizing Verheggen is in the right, he is given permission to descend from the cabin and is escorted by two guards to the nearest phone. One guard stays with Pochet. Permission to pass the signs is obtained and the journey continues.

The engineers Verheggen and Pochet keep the vapour release activated the whole time, even when the engine is not moving. This absolutely unnecessary manoeuvre, unobserved by the three SS-guards, causes extreme loss of water. Verheggen and Pochet only raise the question of a fill-up of water as they came to Mechelen, where they know the water supply cannot be replenished due to severe damage caused to the water conduits in the course of the latest allied bombing of the Mechelen train yard. This causes the train to be diverted to the overcrowded Muizen Train Station where the nearest water replenishment tanks are available.

11:40 p.m.

The Ghost train pulls in at Muizen Train Station. The train is not given permission to leave. Shots are heard around 0:15 a.m. The person responsible for the German train eventually shows up around5.30 p.m.and orders the train to return to Mechelen.

September 3, 1944 – Sunday

05:30 a.m.

 The Ghost train leaves Muizen. Approaching Mechelen the wheels of the locomotive start slipping as the train takes a curb. The malfunctioning sand distributors cause the slipping. Verheggen calls in at the nearest phone and requests a locomotive be sent to pull his convoy away. A Type I locomotive is available and will be sent ASAP. Its driver is Gerardy. Verheggen makes certain the man at the other side is well informed of the contents of his train and its destination.

Returning to his engine he gets into a discussion with the SS-soldiers manning the anti-aircraft boxcar, which has shifted position from last boxcar atVorst, to first boxcar behind the locomotive at Muizen. They demand their boxcar be repositioned in the back of the train. Verheggen plans to leave them behind. He has informed Pochet of his intentions and plan. As soon as he has disconnected the AA-car, he will not hook it on again and leave forBrusselswithout it. That is the reason why the AA-boxcar was missing when the train pulled in at Klein-Eiland.

 10:15 a.m.

The Ghost train arrives at Klein-Eiland Train Station. The Germans and the (Belgian) collaborators immediately claim Gerardy and his locomotive. In the face of the advance of the allies towardsBrussels, all Germans and collaborators have now reached the point of sheer panic and their only aim is to grab any available transport to make sure they can escape toGermany.  Gerardy’s engine is hooked up to a German train and he himself is forced with a gun at point blank to pull the train out. Later on he and his stoker will manage to flee from the engine in the Mechelen area.

Verheggen’s locomotive having been detached from the train, the driver decides to make his escape.  He descends from his engine and starts inspecting the locomotive, walking around it. One guard stays behind holding a rifle to Pochet’s back. The two guards have left. As soon as Verheggen is out of the German’s sight he makes a dash for it and can get away from the marshalling yard unscathed. Pochet decides to let the fire die out in the engine and starts taking actions to that effect.

Phase 3:

September 3, 1944 – Sunday

09:10 a.m.

Although the Brussels-South personnel have decided to follow the example of the other railway yards and abandon the train stations leaving the Germans to their own problems, they return to their posts as soon as they are informed by phone from Brussels-West that a prisoner train is approaching Klein-Eiland.

The train commander, unaware of Jungclaus’ decision, decidedly demands another locomotive to be hooked up to his train. A troop train commander has already confiscated locomotive 109. For the other machine, locomotive 1202, there is no driver available, Verheggen having made a dash for it. Also by this time stoker Pochet has managed to kill the fire in the engine.  One locomotive is reserved for a Red Cross train. All of sudden it appears several locomotives have been sent off to Schaarbeek without convoys. All signs being held on “safe”, approaching trains just pass the Klein-Eiland Station without stopping. Apparently the Klein-Eiland railway people have taken all the right measures to make it impossible for the prisoner train to leave the station again.

10:30 a.m.

Baron Knudse de Verchou, proconsul ofSweden, Mr. Miney, consul ofSwitzerlandand Mr. Lieckendael, Director of Public Safety are called to the office of the German Ambassador Mayr-Falkenbergh who informs them officially of Jungclaus’ orders to release the prisoners and that the prisoner train is on its way back. The delegation immediately departs for the Klein-Eiland Train Station.

10:45 a.m.

Dr. Van Dooren whose wife is one of the prisoners in the train, starts negotiations with the German Klein-Eiland railway commander.  The doctor arrives with Mr. Roberte of the Red Cross. Roberte has been informed at6 a.m.by the German ambassador that the train had been ordered back and that all prisoners were to return to their cells at Saint-Gilles prison.  Roberte is determined to not let the prisoners return to prison and asks Van Dooren to initiate talks with the German commandant.

12:30 p.m.

The commandant himself being in the dark on any specific orders, lets himself be convinced and orders the prisoners to be released from the boxcars.  He however decides that the boxcar containing the allied airmen will not be opened and that the prisoners inside that specific boxcar will be stay in as PoWs. Shortly after the liberation of the 1.370 prisoners Jungclaus’ orders to liberate the prisoners reach Klein-Eiland station.

Research and text: Walter Verstraeten, July 2004.



EPISODE 348 A SURPRISE EMAIL FROM EDOUARD RENIERE in Belgium re HX 313….escape of eric mallett and Ken Sweatman in 1944



Begin forwarded message:


From: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>
Subject: hx 313….escape of eric mallet
Date: May 22, 2021 at 7:56:42 AM EDT
To: Alan Skeoch <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>


EPISODE 348    SURPRISE — AN EMAIL FROM BELGIUM RE: SURVIVORS OF CRASH OF HX 313 (KEN SWEATMAN AND ERIC MALLETT)


alan skeoch
May 2021

What  a surprise!  I do not think I can overstates the surprise I felt when I opened an email
from Edouard Reniere sent from Brussels in Belgium.  He had been surfing the internet and
found my story about Victor Poppa and the crash of HX 313 on a raid over Bourg Leopold
on the night of May 27,28 in 1944.   Most readers are familiar with the diary entries of Victor Poppa….
both hilarious at times as he searched for women on his off hours and his graphic descriptions
of the bombing missions.  

The story began long ago when I began tracing the events that led to the death of George Freeman

in 1944.  He was killed in HX313, a Halifax Bomber.   Others survived the crash. Their stories have
come together.


Here is the email from Edward Reniere and a print out of the escapes of Ken Sweatman and Eric Mallett …
bomb aimer and pilot of the ill fated Blonde Bomber.

Good morning,
While searching further on the two RCAF airmen mentioned above, I found your website at http://alanskeoch.ca/?p=3687
This is to tell you we have a page (in French only) for both of them :”
Edouard Reniere


First is the English translation of the escape of pilot Eric Mallett followed by the story of Ken Sweatman

ERIC MALLETT

Powered by Google TranslateTranslate

PERSON HIDDEN UNTIL RELEASE

Last updated May 20, 2021.

Eric Leo MALLETT / J.6186
4015 West 35th Avenue, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (4141 Brand North, Vancouver in his Lib report) 
Born November 14, 1916 in England / † April 15, 2000 Vancouver, Canada. 
Fl / Lt, RAF Bomber Command 424 Squadron, pilot. 
Landing location: near Bourg-Léopold and Zonhoven. 
Handley Page Halifax Mk III, HX313, QB-B “Blonde Bomber”, shot down by a hunter during a mission to Bourg-Leopold military camp on the night of May 27-28, 1944. 
Crushed near the Langven in Oostham , 6 Km OSO from Bourg-Leopold / Leopoldsburg, Belgian Limburg. 
Duration: 3 ½ months. 
Camps: Bellevaux, Acremont.

Further information :

Escape report in WO 208/3350. Lib Report IS9WEA / MB / 1358.

The plane took off on May 27 at 11:45 p.m. from Skipton-on-Swale. After hitting the device near their objective, Mallett orders the crew to jump.



Photo of the Halifax HX-313 “Blonde Bomber” (source: http://alanskeoch.ca/?p=3877)

Three men will be killed: F / Off Navigator Robert Aubrey Irwin, Radio / Mechanic Sgt Wilfred George Wakely and Dorsal Gunner Sgt George Frank Freeman. All three will first be buried on May 30 in Sint-Truiden. They were subsequently exhumed in the Heverlee War Cemetery in Heverlee / Louvain-Leuven.

Wounded rear gunner F / Sgt Victor G. Poppa is taken prisoner.

Eric Mallett, his bomber Kenneth Sweatman , mechanic Sgt Maurice Muir and F / Off co-pilot WJ Elliott escape capture.

On June 22, however, while Muir and Muir were cycling towards Veerle, they encountered two men in a car who brought them to 19 Rue Forestière in Brussels. They stay there until July 3, when they are driven by car to another house, where they meet five men. Four of the latter escort them to a car, supposedly to have them photographed. Muir reports that as he was about to get into the car, a German soldier appeared, the four men pulled out guns and told them to get in. The soldier was driving when the vehicle brought them to the Luftwaffe Police HQ at Avenue Louise. Muir and Elliott were searched there and then taken to Saint-Gilles Prison.

After 3 months in Saint-Gilles, Muir, Elliott and other prisoners are on September 2, 1944 aboard the “Ghost Train” (“Ghost Train”) leaving for Germany, but which will never leave the country, resistant railway workers prevented it, thus allowing the release of more than a thousand prisoners, mainly civilians. Muir and Elliott will be in hiding in Brussels until September 9, when they join the Hôtel Métropole. The next day, they flew to Paris for questioning before reaching England by plane on the 12th.

After landing, Mallett buries parachute and Mae-West and walks southwest for 2 kilometers. A man beckons him to hide and he stays for a while in a cornfield, where he unsticks his badges. At daybreak, he buys a pair of shoes from a farmer in a village and uses 50 BF from his escape kit to do so. A second man then takes him to another village, where he finds his bomber, Sweatman. They must stay 9 days in a nearby wood, where they are brought food and civilian clothes. They are then taken to Geel, where they are hidden for 8 weeks.

A 1948 report on the activities of the Geel Section of the MNB (Mouvement National Belge / Belgisch Nationaal Beweging) , indicates that “fallen to Balen-Nethe”, Mallett and Sweatman were recovered by Victor NEELS (from 97 Rosselaar to Balen-Nethe – of the Mol-Postel Section of the  MNB ), which handed them over on June 5 to the Clement LEEMANS Group of Geel. The priest François SCHMIDT (College of Geel) lodged them for one day and then took them to Miss RENIES from Geel, where they stayed until July 14. On this date, SCHMIDT came to take them back and had them taken to Gustaaf RENAERTS, from Kasterlee, who entrusted them to Mme VERSTRAETEN from Turnhout.

According to information gathered by Kamiel Mertens, helped by Colonel NEELS before arriving in Turnhout. Sweatman and Mallett are hidden from July 14 to August 4, 1944 at Zozine Émilienne LAFFILI, 41, wife of François VERSTRAETEN (prisoner in Germany since May 1940) at n ° 80 (currently n ° 84) of the Kwakkelstraat in Turnhout. Note: Zosime LAFILI’s first name is used under different spellings depending on the sources: Zozine, Jozine, Josine, but his birth certificate drawn up in Leuven on November 17, 1902 clearly reproduces Zosime.

From Zosime LAFFILI, still according to Kamiel Mertens, they are guided by her in the company of Albert GEVERS (living in Mol) from Turnhout to Antwerp, then to Brussels, where the meeting was at the Place Communale in Laeken. There, the “packages” were handed over to Frédéric DE MEYER (living at 102 Rue de la Victoire, in Saint-Gilles-Bruxelles).



False identity card established in Brussels for Mallett, identifying him as Frans Dumont, employee, 
living at 16 Rue Blanche in Saint-Gilles, Brussels

Passed through Brussels and Dinant, Mallett will be placed with Sweatman around mid-July in a Catholic school between Bastogne and Libramont. He will arrive there in the company of Paul Kasza , Lloyd Hermanski , Ronald Dawson and James Sherwood, among others All will be liberated by American troops on September 8, 1944.



Articulet from the “Vancouver Sun”, July 5, 1944, announcing that Eric Mallett is missing 

Articulet from the “Vancouver Sun”, September 28, 1944, 
confirming that Eric Mallett and Kenneth Sweatman are safe.

Eric Mallett wrote a book on his escape: “Eric Mallett’s Story: Through the German Lines with Forged Identity Papers”, edited by W. Ronald Conway and published by Conway Publishing, Victoria, BC, Canada in 1993.

The inset photo is from https://www.balenbevrijd.com/mei-2019.html.



© Philippe Connart, Michel Dricot, Edouard Renière, Victor Schutters


KEN SWEATMAN

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OPERATION MARATHON AVIATOR

Last updated May 20, 2021.

Kenneth Cyril SWEATMAN / R.20655
Kelliher, Saskatchewan, Canada (his wife Thelma lived in Calgary, Alberta, Canada during her service in Europe) 
Born 1920 / † April 30, 1987 in Kelliher, Saskatchewan, Canada 
WO 2, RCAF Bomber Command 424 Squadron, bomber 
Landed near Balen-Nethe, Province of Antwerp, Belgium. 
Handley Page Halifax Mk III, serial number HX313, QB-B, “Blonde Bomber”, shot down by a hunter during a mission to the Bourg-Leopold military camp on the night of May 27-28, 1944 
Crashed near the Langven to Oostham, 6 km OSO from Bourg-Leopold / Leopoldsburg, Belgian Limburg 
Duration: 3 ½ months 
Marathon Camps: Bellevaux / Acremont

Further information :

The plane took off on May 27, 44 at 11:45 p.m. from Skipton-on-Swale.



Photo of the Halifax HX-313 “Blonde Bomber” (source: http://alanskeoch.ca/?p=3877)

Three men will be killed: F / Off Navigator Robert Aubrey Irwin, Radio / Mechanic Sgt Wilfred George Wakely and Dorsal Gunner Sgt George Frank Freeman. All three will first be buried on May 30 in Sint-Truiden. They were subsequently exhumed in the Heverlee War Cemetery in Heverlee / Louvain-Leuven.

Fl / Sgt Victor G. Poppa, rear gunner, wounded, is taken prisoner.

Kenneth Sweatman, his pilot the Fl / Lt Eric Mallett, Engineer Sgt Maurice Muir and Fl / Off Co-pilot WJ Elliott escaped capture. On June 22, however, while Muir and Muir were cycling towards Veerle, they encountered two men in a car who brought them to 19 Rue Forestière in Brussels. They stay there until July 3, when they are driven by car to another house, where they meet five men. Four of the latter escort them to a car, supposedly to have them photographed. Muir reports that as he was about to get into the car, a German soldier appeared, the four men pulled out guns and told them to get in. The soldier was driving when the vehicle brought them to the Luftwaffe Police HQ at Avenue Louise. Muir and Elliott were searched there and then taken to Saint-Gilles Prison. After 3 months in Saint-Gilles, Muir, Elliott and other prisoners are on September 2, 1944 aboard the “Ghost Train” (“Ghost Train”) leaving for Germany, but which will never leave the country, resistant railway workers prevented it, thus allowing the release of more than a thousand prisoners, mainly civilians. Muir and Elliott will be in hiding in Brussels until September 9, when they join the Hôtel Métropole. The next day, they flew to Paris for questioning before reaching England by plane on the 12th. but who will never leave the country, resistant railway workers having prevented it, thus allowing the release of more than a thousand prisoners, mainly civilians. Muir and Elliott will be in hiding in Brussels until September 9, when they join the Hôtel Métropole. The next day, they flew to Paris for questioning before reaching England by plane on the 12th. but who will never leave the country, resistant railway workers having prevented it, thus allowing the release of more than a thousand prisoners, mainly civilians. Muir and Elliott will be in hiding in Brussels until September 9, when they join the Hôtel Métropole. The next day, they flew to Paris for questioning before reaching England by plane on the 12th.

A 1948 report on the activities of the Geel Section of the MNB (Mouvement National Belge / Belgisch Nationaal Beweging) , indicates that “fallen to Balen-Nethe”, Mallett and Sweatman were recovered by Victor NEELS (from 97 Rosselaar to Balen-Nethe – of the Mol-Postel Section of the  MNB ), which handed them over on June 5 to the Clément LEEMANS Group in Geel. The priest François SCHMIDT (College of Geel), lodged them for a day and then took them to Miss RENIES from Geel, where they stayed until July 14. On this date, SCHMIDT came to take them back and had them taken to Gustaaf RENAERTS, from Kasterlee, who entrusted them to Mme VERSTRAETEN from Turnhout.

According to information gathered by Kamiel Mertens, helped by Colonel NEELS before arriving in Turnhout. Sweatman and Mallett are hidden from July 14 to August 4, 1944 at Zozine Émilienne LAFFILI, 41, wife of François VERSTRAETEN (prisoner in Germany since May 1940) at n ° 80 (currently n ° 84) of the Kwakkelstraat in Turnhout. Note: Zosime LAFILI’s first name is used under different spellings depending on the sources: Zozine, Jozine, Josine, but his birth certificate drawn up in Leuven on November 17, 1902 clearly reproduces Zosime.

From Zosime LAFFILI, still according to Kamiel Mertens, they are guided by her in the company of Albert GEVERS (living in Mol) from Turnhout to Antwerp, then to Brussels, where the meeting was at the Place Communale in Laeken. There, the “packages” were handed over to Frédéric DE MEYER (living at 102 Rue de la Victoire, in Saint-Gilles-Bruxelles).

Around mid-July, Sweatman and Sgt Richard Irwin , shot on June 13, arrived one evening at 10:30 pm at the house of “Monique” Yvonne BIENFAIT at 35 Rue Guillaume Kennis in Schaerbeek where they met Charles Earnhartand Woodrow Tarleton . “Monique” told the airmen that a Gestapo agent would drop by the next morning around 7:30 am to drive them to Dinant, from where they would continue their route by bicycle towards a place near the French border. She reassures her interlocutors by saying that the Gestapo is also a British Secret Service agent effectively helping the resistance.

At 7:30 the next day, the man appears, then accompanies “Monique”, Gaston MATTHYS and the four airmen to a house in the southern part of Brussels where Yvonne BIENFAIT telephones to announce their arrival to the following guides to take charge of them. She joins the group and tells them that only three men can be on this trip and that Earnhart will have to wait for the transfer the following week.

After his passage through Dinant, Sweatman will find Earnhart and Tarleton later in a Catholic school between Bastogne and Libramont. He will arrive there in the company of Paul Kasza , Lloyd Hermanski , Ronald Dawson , James Sherwood and Eric Mallett, among others .

All will be liberated by American troops on September 8, 1944.



Articulet from the “Vancouver Sun”, July 5, 1944, announcing that Eric Mallett is missing 

Articulet from the “Vancouver Sun”, September 28, 1944, 
confirming that Eric Mallett and Kenneth Sweatman are safe.

Kenneth Sweatman rests at Horse Lake cemetery in West Bend, Saskatchewan, Canada

Inset photos are from http://alanskeoch.ca/?p=6465 (left) and http://alanskeoch.ca/?p=6448 (right)



© Philippe Connart, Michel Dricot, Edouard Renière, Victor Schutters


I WONDER if I can trace the book written by Eric Mallett in 1993?  “Eric Mallett’s Story: Through the German Lines with Forged Identity Papers”, edited by W. Ronald Conway and published by Conway Publishing, Victoria, BC, Canada in 1993.
Maybe I have already done my part by putting the diary of Victor Poppa in these earlier emails.  Time will tell.

alan

EPISODE 347 SNAKE TRAPPED IN A BAG…ON A BIG BIG MOVIE DAY MAY 20, 2021


EPISODE 347   SNAKE TRAPPED IN A  BAG…ON A BIG, BIG MOVIE DAY  MAY 20M 2021

alan skeoch
May 20 , 2021



“Snake got trapped in the green house, Alan.”
“Trapped?”
“Plastic tulip bag…snake got in but  could not get out.”
“what should we do?”
“Better get Marjorie…and a pair of scissors.””
“Marjorie will hold the snake while Grant cuts the tulip bag.”
“Why would the snake want to get in that bag?”
“Who knows?  Curiosity?”
“Must have been something worth eating…a big bug…a small frog”
“Or the bag was a good place to sleep.”
“Get the snake some water.”
“There, Mr. Snake…you have been rescued…courtesy of Grant and Marjorie”
“And two others looking on…masked but forgot  the separation.”
(Maybe someone could explain how to cut a snake from a tulip bag while
keeping six to 8 feet separation.)
“Everyone has had the covid 19 Vaccine…and the Covid test…regularly…compulsory
part of movie making these days.”
“Should we have let the snake strangle itself or should we have saved its life?
“Just  another moral dilemma in  the global pandemic.






This day, May 20, 2021, turned out to be an exhausting day for the set decoration
people and for Marjorie and me.   Woody , our dog, was smart.  He pushed open
the farm house basement door and got into a nice cool place.  He only came out
to check out the snake as you can see.

Below is a sample of things taken and things returned.

Everyone was masked….and tried to keep separation but that was not easy.









































































Towards the end of the day I noticed something strange on our front lawn.
Three of the crew were flat on the ground…writhing just like the snake.  

“What’s up folks?”
“Simon twisted his back…these exercises should make it better.”



You may wonder about the movie industry and its relation to the pandemic.
First…we need the movies, especially those trapped in tiny rooms
Second…the movie industry is very careful.  See the blue
arm bands above..  Coloured arm bands keep the movie sections separated.
One mistake…one exposure…and the movie shuts down.  No joke.













Then Andrew Skeoch arrived to load the Merry go Round.   Needed a special 
truck to get it delivered to the movie site.  No easy task.






I bet the only thing you remember is the snake in the tulip bag.

alan

EPISODE 346 FROM APRIL TO MAY…WHAT A DIFFERENCE A MONTH MAKES: GREEN LEAVES AND TULIPS AND APPLE BLOSSUMS

EPISODE 346    FROM APRIL TO MAY…WHAT A DIFFERENCE A MONTH MAKES: GREEN LEAVES, TULIPS, APPLE BLOSSOMS AND DANDELIONS


alan skeoch
May 20, 2021

This episode 346 is designed to be compared with episode 344 which shows  a landscape
without greenery.   The contrast is stunning.  And the contrast is necessary for it makes
us think more deeply about the world around us.  One without the other is unthinkable.

Not much need be said here.  The impact of the change from April to May is
something to behold.  If there is life anywhere else in the universe I doubt it could
be as beautiful as here on earth.  Certainly the prospect of living on Mars seems
grim indeed when compared with our changing seasons on earth.

So do not come knocking on our door with the offer of a free flight to Mars.

alan

Fwd: TRACTOR Loaded 1953 INTERNATIONAL W6 IN 2021 EN ROUTE TO MOVIE SET

EPISODES  345   YES, IT IS POSSIBLE TO LOVE A TRACTOR


(TRACTOR Loaded 1953 INTERNATIONAL W6 IN 2021 EN ROUTE TO MOVIE SET)

alan skeoch
May 18, 2021






YES, IT IS POSSIBLE TO LOVE A TRACTOR

November 1965.  Cold with a smattering of snow in the air and on the ground.

It was a small auction crowd that clustered around a rather Spartan collection of 
possessions.  I would have expected the Smith family to have more bits and 
pieces by which to measure their lifetime.  Seemed like they had just been
getting by…hard scrabble farming.

My cousin Eleanor Townsend’s husband John Calder arrived jus in time.I needed 
his wisdom on that cold day.   

“Start her up, Smith,” hollered auctioneer Max Storey . “Back her up…now forward…sound 
good…shut her down”
And there it sat…Smith still in the seat.
“She’s a 1953 International W6…runs like a charm…been cared for…pay no
attention to the rust…she purrs like a kitten.  Who will give me a thousand dollars?”
The crowd was silent.  Not a good sign for Mr. Smith whose winter jacket was worn enough
to have stuffing popping out at the seams and one elbow. “”
“John, what do you think?”
“Good tractor…we have two of them on the Townsend farm.”
“Two hundred,” I waved my hand to Max who looked at me as if I was a thief. 
“two fifty…” someone said
“Three hundred,” I responded nervously.  Scared. 
“Three fifty.”
“Four hundred,”  

And so I bought a tractor.  Big one.  
forty five horsepower.  Really mine now.  But not
back on our farm yet.   Next day Marjorie drove me to the Smith farm and I began
the overland trip to our farm…20 or so miles away.   What a joyful trip.  That was
when I fell in love with Old Betsy…as we were huffing and puffing our way east
to Erin township.  Cold day with a storm in the air.   

Was this the same day that Marjorie’s horse Spartacus got his tail caught in 
an errant length of barbed wire?  I believe it was.  Sparky bolted and
dumped Marjorie and then began to high tail it home to the Fox farm on the
Rockwood road.  

We met.  Old Betsy with me at the wheel, and Sparky heading to his former home.
…riderless.   This venture was becoming troublesome.  What should I do?
Where was Marjorie…was she hurt?   Then she drove over a rolling hill 
stopped breathlessly to tell me about the barbed wire which was still
attached to Sparky’s tail she thought.

“I’ll go get him…you take the tractor to the farm. Sparky is just heading
to the only home he knows…Al Fox’s place.  We’ll put him in  he stable
and get him later.”

And so I continued my little Odyssey.   Some events in our lives
are written in indelible ink in our brains.  This November day in 
1965 was one of them.

Before we had the kids we had a great life.  I learned how to operate
a drag three furrow plough while Marjorie explored the Erin township
side roads with Spartacus.

In 1868 we started our family with the birth of Kevin.  Marjorie sold
Spartacus to a doctor’s wife living near Hornby.  She took that
last ride with Sparky south on the fifth line. I believe she cried most of the way.

We never sold old Betsy though.  She is still with us.  Today
our second son Andrew and one of his friends Shawn loaded old
Betsy on the back of this truck.

She is not running any more.  But she is not heading for the
scrap yard either.  For the next few months Old Betsy will be
a movie star beside a derelict barn somewhere near Ancaster.
alan skeoch


EPISODE 344 CONTRAST: JUST ONE MONTH AGO WE HAD A SNOWSTORM ON APRIL 18, 2021…TREES WERE BARE

EPISODE 344   CONTRAST:  JUST ONE MONTH AGO WE HAD A SNOWSTORM ON APRIL 18…TREES WERE BARE


alan skeoch
may 16,2021


EPISODE 344    WE HAD A SNOWSTORM ON APRIL 18, 2021…TREES WERE BARE

Alan skeoch
May 17, 2021

Memory is short sometimes.  Remember the brief  snowstorm we had April 18?
Remember the trees were bare.  Remember the fields were turning green but
some were brown?  Remember you still wore winter jackets? 

What you do remember is the long long lockdown due to Covid 19.

Next Episode will feature h
leaves and sleeveless shirts.   A new season dawning.  Planting time.
The renewed freedom we were feeling with the arrival of universal vaccines

But this series of pictures are bleak.  Next comes springtime.

EPISODE 343 TRUCKLOAD of TREASURES FOR A MOVIE

EPISODE 343    TRUCKLOAD OF TREASURES FOR A MOVIE


alan skeoch
May 2021


Often friends ask us about the movie business.  Here is a load of our things heading for
a movie set in May 2021.   Three day job.  Pick up a truckload of Amish related set
dressing.   Set up the scene outside an Amish barn.  Clear the site of people for the 
filming on Day 2.  Then on Day 3,takie it all apart and return things to our farm.  
Fast work.

The crew have all been pre-screened for Covid 19.   

Fwd: EPISODE 342 RESPECT OR NOVELTY…AMUSING INCIDENT IN TIANAMIN SQUARE



Begin forwarded message:


From: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>
Subject: EPISODE 342 RESPECT OR NOVELTY…AMUSING INCIDENT IN TIANAMIN SQUARE
Date: May 15, 2021 at 10:16:05 AM EDT
To: Marjorie Skeoch <marjorieskeoch@gmail.com>, Alan Skeoch <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>, John Wardle <john.t.wardle@gmail.com>


EPISODE 342    RESPECT OR NOVELTY…AMUSING INCIDENT IN TIANAMIN SQUARE, BEIJING, CHINA


alan skeoch
May 2021

As mentioned earlier, our trip to China was surprising.  I say this in the positive sense.
Another example occurred in Tianamin Square where a large group of Chinese tourists
from some distant point in western China seemed to find our small family fascinating.
They wanted their picture taken with us in the middle.  They were particularly interested
in Marjorie who was in a rented wheelchair due to her knew surgery…and our grand
daughter Morgan.


EPISODE 340 TWO THINGS THAT SURPRISED US IN CHINA…FIND THE SURPRISES

EPISODE 340   TWO THINGS THAT SURPRISED US IN CHINA…FIND THE SURPRISES


alan skeoch
May 2021

As I mentioned earlier, Marjorie and I did not want to  go to China but Kevin insisted.
We felt we would be strangers in a strange country with differing political systems
that were hostile to each other.

Right from the start we were surprised to discover two things about Beijing.  See
if you can find them.


The surprises ?   One you may have guessed.  The other is the last picture in this series.  


THIS young girl was our guide hired by Kevin.  She was a very funny person…told lots of jokes that were tasteful and very
funny.   Jokes that were not part of a routine.  She liked us and was super relaxed.  She was very proud of her country…normal.
But also very interested in our country.





ANSWER:   1) WE seemed to be liked…big smiles often
   2) the street signs and other signage was in two languages…Chinese of course but also English.  English!
Why would the signage be in English?   Why would people on any street in China want to smile at us…warm smiles.?
Even the boys who could well be soldiers.