.
EVENTS IN VICTOR’S OWN WORDS
“Our bomber did not explode. There were fires in from front to rear. The inside of much of the plane was cherry red.
My first thoughts were: ‘You have been waiting for this and now it has finally happened.’ I called on the Intercom
but received no answer, only static. HX 313, however, was still flying in a straight line.”
“I pulled off my flying helmet, opened my turret doors, reached for my parachute and snapped it to my chest. I stayed in my
position because I saw no parachute go by the tail. Then, a few seconds later, I saw one. It was open and on its side
parallel to the ground just missing the port rudder and fin. Then I decided to go. I swung my turrets 90 degrees in the
fuselage and tried to go out but couldn’t because of the fire and wind. I tried twice to no avail. By this time the ground
was appearing quite close. I could tell from the fires that to bail out from the aft fuselage exit would have entailed too much
time and by then it would be too late anyway. So I sat there waiting for my end. The aircraft then went into a flat spin.
My turret twisted free and I was flung out by the brute force. My leg, however, was stuck momentarily under my leg guard.
I could feel my knee pull right out of its socket. Then my leg came free. I was falling flat on my back. I looked on my
chest for my parachute and it was not there. The parachute had been pulled away for my chest by the wind force and was
nowhere feet from my face and above. Pulled on the
harness and brought the parachute down close enough so I could grab the D ring and pulled. It opened with sharp snap. A pain
knifed through my groin, I put my arms above my head, grabbed the harness and pulled thereby relieving the pain. A few
seconds later I saw the ground coming up real fast. I felt as though I was an arrow. I hit the ground hard and collapsed
with my parachute falling on top of me. I am sure the chute had opened at less that 1,000 feet and our aircraft had been
at 11,900when we were first hit by the flak and then shot up by the JU 88.”
“I managed to get onto my feet but I could not feel anything from the waist down…felt like metal bands were clamped around
my ankles and knees. I was standing balanced as though on stilts. Just t hen I could hear motors screaming…an aircraft
in its death sieve. I Dropped flat to the ground. It is amazing how close you think you are to the ground, as if you are being
pulled down tight, pressed into the grass. This aircraft hit a few fields away and exploded.”
“All of this happened at approximately 2 a.m. on the 28th of May, 1944. After the explosion I found I couldn’t walk but moved with
a painful shuffle. I moved away from the area slowly. At wire fences I would put my body through and then with my hands pull my legs through.
I moved along in this manner until the dawn started to glow. Then I made my way into the centre of a wheat field where I lay down
and fell into a deep sleep. I awoke at noon hour with the sun shining down at me. I made my way out of the field and crawled under
a tree. I took off my electric suit and found I had suffered some spinal chord damage and had torn open my left leg and buttocks.
The leg was swollen twice its normal size and black and blue. I also had torn muscles and ligaments. I crawled to a farm house
where the farmer was kind but reluctant to hide me. He gave me water and milk to drink. We were advised in England never
to impose upon these people. I they showed willingness, fine. If not, leave. If we were caught with them they would suffer
Grievously.”
“My legs were starting to stiffen up and the pain was increasing. I made my way to another field where I lay down and rolled and rolled
in agony. I was this way well into the afternoon. Finally I felt that I must get some assistance. On my knees I made my way
back to the farm house and indicated I would like police assistance. While waiting, a Belgian doctor gsve
me an injection of some sort but it had no effect. I gave the farm woman all of my escape money and shortly two Luftwaffe
NCO’s came in an automobile. I was placed in the back seat with one NCO and because I could not bend my legs I had
to lay across his body.”
“I was driven to our target the previous night. There was one room left standing where I was deposited on a bed. Despite all
of the killing we had done I was not mistreated. I was given a bowl of greasy stew which i could not down. Later, I was visited
by a German medical officer All he did was rant and rave at me in German. Although I Felt he was going to strike me, he did not.
Three days later I was taken outside and placed in the back of a truck with four caskets. A German NCO pointed to one and
said “Komerad Irwin. This was our navigator Bob Irwin. I gave a negative response. He then pointed to the casket on my right
and said “Kamerad Wakely”. This was the coffin of Wilf Wakely. Again I gave a negative response . I was not questioned about the
third caskrt. This one must have been George. The fourth was empty as I had moved it with my foot. At that time I did not know George
was dead. It wasn’t until I returned to England after the war was over that I got word from RCAF records that George had been
killed. This left me stunned as Hank (George) and I were real close friends.”
What happened to Hank Freeman? “So Hank could have been the first one out as Bill seems to remember someone going out ahead of him. Bill may be correct
but I don’t think so. I had no trouble hearing the clatter of bullets coming through from below and stopping just short of my position. I think Hanks was hanging
there. Dead. Remember the comment that the crew passed by the upper turret and saw feet hanging down and my smelling burnt flesh when I was put in
the German truck with the coffins later. But I could be wrong. If Hank bailed out he would have been the first out followed by Bill, Muir, Wilf, Bob, Eric, Ken and
finally myself. Personally I think he was killed by the tremendous burst of bullets crashing through HX 313 from front to back in those few seconds. Hank
wasn’t the type to bail out first. He would have waited to be sure. I only tried to bale out after I saw a chute go by horizontally which was Ken. I was
sure I would go down with HX 313…certain death. Then fate took hold, the bubble shifted and I fell out just in time.”
Note: Victor Poppa’s account closed the file on the last flight of HX 313. He was the last person to get out of the aircraft. All had
been able to get out one way or another, except for George Freeman. Two who got out were killed when they hit the ground.
The rest survived. George was likely killed when the JU 88 strafed the plane. One of the crew remembers George’s legs hanging down
as he worked his way past the upper turret to reach the escape hatch. The nagging thought that George remained alive worried Victor because
gunners were often trapped in their turrets like Victor had been. HX 313 exploded on impact near an abandoned railway station. Eric Mallett
and Ken Sweatman were escorted past a pile of melted metal that had once been The Blonde Bomber. They could not stop to look
closely for their escorts were members of the Belgian Underground and it was imperative that they hide Ken and Eric as
quickly as possible. Victor Poppa, George Elliott and Morris Muir became POW’s.
STALAG LUFT VII
Note: OnMay 19,1984, almost 200 Canadian veterans and their wives celebrated the 50 year anniversary of 424 Squadron…the Tiger Squadron…the ‘City of Hamilton Squadron.
Among those present were Victor Poppa and his wife Louise. In the special Memorial book, Victor provided an overview of his life as a POW in Stalag Lutt VII.
Victor Poppa: ” After hospitalization and interrogation i Iwas sent to Stalag Luft VII at Bankau which is ten miles from the Polish border in a straight line between Breslau and Krakau.
At first we were given one Red Cross parcel a week plus one meal a day. The tins in the Red Cross parcels were punctured to keep us from hoarding the food for escape use.
By September 1944 the parcels only came once every two weeks and on Christmas day, December 25 1944, we received our last Red Cross parcel. In the new year the weather
became colder. Since our food had been reduced we felt the cold more. ”

upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/02/Red_Cross_Parcel.jpg/500px-Red_Cross_Parcel.jpg 2x” data-file-width=”2848″ data-file-height=”2136″>

Note: Other surviving POW’s described Stalag Luft VII as terrible…especially for the Russians in adjoining POW camp who were systematically starved to death. One Canadian POW
said they sometimes tried to throw potato peels over the barbed wire to the Russians who fought to get whatever they could. Russian corpses often had flesh wounds related to
cannibalism. Efforts to help the Russians was nearly impossible. No point, explained one guard, just a waste of food for the Russians would soon be dead.
Note: Victor Poppa’s description is short. Conversations with Victor were much more detailed but I have no detailed written account except from memory. Victor did describe the
horrors faced by the Russians. He also described a Russian women’s POW camp which was also grim. Grim? Wrong word. Horrible is better.
In 1941 Hitler gave the infamous Commisar Order that permitted the wholesale murder of Russian POW’s and civilians. He justified it by saying that Stalin would do
the same to German POW’s. The estimated numbers of deaths by starvation or execution is mind boggling.
(“It is estimated that at least 3.3 million Soviet POWs died in Nazi custody, out of 5.7 million. This figure represents a total of 57% of all Soviet POWs and may be contrasted with 8,300 out of 231,000 British and U.S. prisoners, or 3.6%. About 5% of the Soviet prisoners who died were Jews.[5] The most deaths took place between June 1941 and January 1942, when the Germans killed an estimated 2.8 million Soviet POWs primarily through deliberate starvation,[6] exposure, and summary execution. A million at most had been released, most of whom were so-called ‘volunteers’ (Hilfswillige) for (often compulsory) auxiliary service in the Wehrmacht, 500,000 had fled or were liberated, the remaining 3.3 million had perished as POWs.”)

An improvised camp for Soviet Prisoners of war. Thousands. Many would starve to death. Allied prisonerss
like Victor Poppa were treated better and many survived.
THE LONG MARCH
“Because of the Russians advance we were ordered to march west and after 15days marching, with very little for, we reached Cloberg on February 5th, 1945. We were put
into boxcars and transformed to Luft 3A which is about 4 miles from Potsdam. Our rations were cut again and we were getting concerned about our health as we were
weaker and noticeably thinner.One morning when we awoke to the sound of gunfire in the distance there were suddenly no guards in the camp. About noon the Russians
appeared. We were told they had hooked up with the Americans about 50 miles to the south of us. Carl Seeley and I decided to cut out on our own.”
Note: See two diary descriptions of the Long March as post scripts. Why was it necessary to march POW’s deep into the collapsing circle of German territory?
Prisoners had negotiating value I suppose. One source reported that Adolph Hitler ordered all POW’s to be shot in the event of a German surrender. This never
happened. The collapse of German forces was fast and it is doubtful that such a wide scale massacre would have happened.
“On the second day out we hooked up with nine French girls. We did the food scrounging for all of us while the girls did the cooking. After 14 days we reachedTorgow and the
Americans. They agreed to pass us on to the Canadians but could do nothing for the French girls as they were civilians. That night we had a farewell party and after exchanging addresses we
boarded a C47 for Brussels.. The next day we were flown to England and boarded a train for Bournemouth and eventually repatriated home to Canada. Out of our crew of eight, five of us
managed to come home.”
“I found my map used by Seeley, myself and the French girls to reach the American sector. Dated Aril 10, 1945. We walked from LUckenwalde POW camp to Juterborg, then south to
Herzberg then SW to Torgau where the Russian and American forces met. I am not sure how long it took…between 9 and 14days.”
Note: This short account was written in 1984. Too bad it is so short. I remember Victor telling me his adventures when he and Seeley walked through the ruins of Germany
to the American lines. At one point while scrounging for food they entered a farmer’s house and faced a German officer in a bedroom. The officer was scared as was Victor.
Nothing happened even though the German had a Luger beneath the covers. Victor backed out of the room. Seeley and Poppa acted as protectors of the nine girls on their
14 day escape. He told me that chaos was too soft a word for the condition of Germany in those immediate post war weeks. I remember asking Victor is they hid at night. Usually
in empty barns or houses he answered.
“What did you do in daylight? Lots of people with guns…Russians, Germans.”
“That was a problem. At first we ducked into ditches or bushes but that was risky. Nervous trigger fingers all around. So we decided it was best to stay exposed on the roads. We became
part of the stream of people moving who knows where. Actually having the nine French girls was protection for Seeley and me.”
Note: Other stories by liberated POW’s abound. In the daytime they wandered through German towns taking whatever was portable. One POW even broke into a paymaster’s office and
found piles of various wartime currencies. “I took some…wish I had taken more for the money turned out to be cashable.” Another group broke into a wine storage building filled with
fine wines from France. One of the POW’s took a case of champagne back to the POW camp for a party. Next day he thought he should get more but by then the building had
been set ablaze. “Burned to the ground.” Most POW’s felt safer in the prison camp rather than in German towns and cities at night. So they raided in daylight and returned to camp
at night. Another Canadian ex POW carefully snipped out a huge portrait of Hitler as a souvenir. “Too big for the C47…you cannot take it aboard.” What most POW’s wanted to
find were German Lugers as there were heaps of recently cast off German uniforms here and there as Germans attempted to suddenly become civilians. “I kicked one pile of German
uniforms and a Luger slid out from the pile. Before I could reach down, other hands grabbed it.” Symbols of the Third Reich were gathered not just by POW’s but by Allied soldiers and
officers as well. They appear now and then in auctions. Harry T—. a good friend of mine had a nice oil painting hanging in his Mississauga home that he cut from a German frame and
rolled up as ‘the spoils of war’. Another friend inherited from his paratrooper father a whole basket full of badges including an Iron Cross along with a large Nazi flag. “What am I going
to do with this?”, he wondered.
Note: What happened to the guards? Seems that some of them ditched their uniforms and mixed in with the refugee streams on the roads. One group of guards had a novel reaction to
the situation. They threw their weapons over the barbed wire fence and became prisoners of the POW’s and were photographed as such. I do not know if that was much protection
against the arrival of Russian troops so suspect those guards were in an American sector. Dead and near dead Russian POW’s must have enraged Russian forces.
A long time ago, back in 1961, I read ‘Documents of the Expulsion’ which detailed the fate of tens of thousands of Germans attempting to escape Russian occupation
of Poland and the Baltic States. There is no horror that I have read since to match what happened to many of these people. German POW’s captured by the Russians were shipped
by the trainload to Siberian prisons where many died. Eventually, years later, some were able to trickle back to Germany. Some may have been Victor Poppa’s prison guards.
When Victor Poppa reached the American sector he was housed
briefly on a recently liberated German air base. “One day a German Messerschmitt flew in escorted by American fighter planes. It landed and a German officer surrendered having escaped
the eastern sector. His girlfriend was with him in the plane.” Both were taken away. “I do not know what happened to the Messerschmitt. But I do remember looking at a great number of aircraft on the base.
Most of them no longer airworthy.” Did Victor Poppa bring any trophies home? I don’t know, but he sure brought back lots of memories. I bet he wanted that Messerscmidt for he had a deep
fascination with aircraft. I can imagine Victor suggesting…. “I guess it would be out of the question for me to fly that Messerscmitt back to England. That would save
a seat in the C47 for someone else?” (never uttered but true to Victor’s nature.)
CONCLUSION:
Those of you who have read Parts 1, 2, and 3 of the Victor Poppa story must feel as I did that
a very human, very graphic, very exciting window had been opened. Perhaps the best way
to close that window is to let Victor do the closing. Below is the last letter Victor Poppa sent
to me on Dec. 7, 1988.
Victor Poppa
33535 Valencia St. R1
Lake Elsinore
California, 92330
Dear Alan, Marjorie, Kevin and Andrew,
I was just reviewing your letter of April 8, 1988 which seems a very long time ago. I regret not
answering sooner. Thanks for your book ‘Focus on Society’ which I have read and enjoyed.
I have a collectors’ item for you…a 12 ounce can of Budweiser Beer with no pull tab for easy
opening, the can must have slipped through inspection. As you know I quit drinking alcohol
years ago which must surprise anyone reading my diary of those war years.
I have not been feeling all that well this year with has hampered my letter writing. Presently
I am getting pain up my left leg from ankle to hip. It pulsates in an arthritic way….very painful.
Louise is having her share of trouble as well. To add to it she fell off our airplane’s horizontal stabilizer
as I was trying as I was trying to get the main wheels out of some soft earth. I pushed down
on the tail to get the nose wheel up and induced Louise to sit on the stabilizer. This kept
the nose wheel up. Louise’s weight was a modest advantage. However when Louise changed
position the tail unit shot up and Louise fell off. She fell about 4.5 feet landing on her left foot then
banged the back of her head. Louise was groaning and crying that she was about to die. A
bone was broken in her foot so Louise is now sporting a cast from toe to just below the knee.
She will be limping around the house for six more weeks.
Then a few weeks ago when I was on a nocturnal visit to the refrigerator I tripped and cracked
a rib when I hit the table top with my side. A few weeks earlier I tripped over the dog on a
similar trip to the refrigerator. That time I cracked my right knee cap I think. There was a
loud ‘crack’ indicating something broke. It doesn’t hurt though.
We had Thelma Sweatman here for two weeks in early February. I gave her the picture of
HX 33. She was happy to get it. Thelma asked me to send you a card from Ken’s funeral.
He died on August 30, my birthday. Ken has let me with the fondest memories. He was a
wonderful person…cool in combat…good and sincere…never changing. Always a good friend.
The world has lost a fine person.
Alan, I should have put in more detail describing some of our missions in my diary. I suppose
I can add comments now.
Have a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New year.
Love from us
Victor and Louise Poppa
Note: I suppose This must seem to be a strange letter . Accidents, ailments…normal give and take
of daily life including Victor’s ‘nocturnal raid on the refrigerator’ and ‘tripping over the dog’. Why
use this letter as a conclusion to his escapades in Bomber Command? Victor had not changed
much. In 1988 he was still flying…and his description of getting his plane out of the mud has a sort
of amusing yet concerned ring to it. His wife Louise was the young girl he met in Quebec City
just before he went overseas in World War Two. She must have known about his escapades
with Hank Freeman and been amused rater than offended.
Perhaps the main reason I have included this letter however is his mention of Ken Sweatman, the
bomb aimer one HX313. The crew bonded and kept in touch. They became family.
Then there is the dog. Probably the same dog that nearly killed me when Victor described a mouse
running back and forth in the dog’s mouth between lips and teeth. “The dog looked at me, Alan,
with a questioning dog grin as if saying ‘what do I do now?’ That caused me to laugh too hard…injest
a piece of stake that was too big for my esophagus…no air..gagging…leapt up on the restaurant
table. Whereupon Victor, lightning speed…whirled me around and locked his hands below my rib
cage…pulled firmly. And saved my life.
I hope that this transcription of his diary can be seen as payback.
alan skeoch
dec. 2019