Leonard Cheshire

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Leonard Cheshire

Geoffrey Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire c.1945
Born 7 September 1917(1917-09-07)
Chester, England
Died 71 October 1992 (aged 75)
Known for VC winner, Charitable organizations
Occupation Aviator, author, spokesperson, humanitarian
Spouse Constance Binney
Sue Ryder
Children Jeromy and Elizabeth Cheshire

Group Captain Geoffrey Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire, VC, OM, DSO and Two Bars, DFC (7 September 191731 July 1992) was a highly decorated British RAF pilot during the Second World War. Among the honours received as a bomber pilot is the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. After the war he became a charity worker, setting up:

  • The Cheshire Foundation Homes for the Sick for disabled people (later known as The Leonard Cheshire Foundation)
  • Leonard Cheshire Centre for Conflict Recovery
  • Ryder-Cheshire Foundation
  • Ryder-Cheshire Volunteers, and
  • The Memorial Fund for Disaster Relief

Contents

Leonard Cheshire was the son of Professor Geoffrey Chevalier Cheshire, DCL, LLD, FBA, a barrister, academic and influential writer on English law. He had one brother, Christopher Cheshire, who also became a wartime pilot. Cheshire was born in Chester but was brought up at his parents' home near Oxford. He was educated at the Dragon School, Oxford, Stowe School and Merton College, Oxford. While at Oxford, he was bet half a pint of beer that he could not walk to Paris. With no more than a few pennies and a pocket handkerchief he won his bet. He graduated in Jurisprudence in 1939.

After the outbreak of the World War II, Cheshire applied for a commission in the Royal Air Force and was initially posted in June 1940 to 102 Squadron, flying Armstrong Whitworth Whitley medium bombers. In November 1940 he was awarded the DSO for flying his badly damaged bomber back to base.

In January 1941 he completed his tour of operations but then volunteered straight away for a second tour. He was posted to No. 35 squadron with the brand new Handley Page Halifax, and completed his second tour early in 1942, by now a Squadron Leader. August 1942 saw a return to operations as CO of No. 76 Squadron RAF. The Squadron had recently suffered high losses operating the Halifax, and Cheshire immediately tackled the low morale of the unit by ordering an improvement in the performance of the squadron aircraft by removing the mid-upper and nose gun turrets along with exhaust covers and other weighty non-essential equipment. This allowed the bombers to fly higher and faster. Losses soon fell and morale rose accordingly. Cheshire became Station Officer Commanding RAF Marston Moor in March as the youngest Group Captain in the RAF, though the job was never to his liking and he pushed for a return to an operational command. These efforts paid off with a posting to succeed Wing Commander Guy Gibson as commander of the legendary 617 "Dambusters" Squadron in September 1943.

While with 617 Cheshire helped pioneer a new method of marking enemy targets for Bomber Command's 5 Group, flying in at a very low level in the face of strong defences, using first, the versatile Mosquito, then a "borrowed" P-51 Mustang fighter. This development work was the subject of some severe intra-service politics, as Cheshire was encouraged by his 5 Group Commander Air Vice-Marshal Ralph Cochrane, although the 8 Group Pathfinder AOC Air Vice-Marshal Don Bennett saw this work as impinging on the responsibilities of his own command.

Cheshire was nearing the end of his fourth tour of duty in July 1944, having completed a total of 102 missions, when he was awarded the Victoria Cross. He was the only one of the 32 VC airmen to win the medal for an extended period of sustained courage and outstanding effort, rather than a single act of valour. His citation noted:

"In four years of fighting against the bitterest opposition he maintained a standard of outstanding personal achievement, his successful operations being the result of careful planning, brilliant execution and supreme contempt for danger – for example, on one occasion he flew his P-51 Mustang in slow figures of 8 above a target obscured by low cloud, to act as a bomb-aiming mark for his squadron. Cheshire displayed the courage and determination of an exceptional leader." It also noted a raid in which he had marked a target, flying a Mosquito at low level against "withering fire."

Cheshire was, in his day, both the youngest Group Captain in the service and, following his VC, the most decorated.

On his 103rd mission, he was official British observer of the nuclear bombing of Nagasaki flying in the support B-29 Big Stink. He did not directly witness the event due to the aircraft commander, James Hopkins' failure to link up with the other B-29s. Hopkins was meant to link up with the others at Yakushima, but he circled at 39,000 feet instead of the agreed height of 30,000 feet. He tried to justify this by the need to keep the VIP passengers out of danger, but Cheshire thought that Hopkins was "overwrought".

”Many assumed that it was Nagasaki which emptied him. In fact, as he kept pointing out, it was the war as a whole. Like Britain herself, he had been fighting or training for fighting since 1939.” [1]

He was earlier quoted as saying: "...then I for one hold little brief for the future of civilization"[2] On his return from the mission he left the RAF and went home to his house, Le Court in Hampshire.

While deciding what he should do with the rest of his life, he heard about the case of Arthur Dykes, who had been one of Leonard's original 'VIP' community at Le Court, Hampshire and was suffering from cancer. Dykes asked Cheshire to give him some land to park a caravan until he recovered, but Cheshire discovered that Dykes was terminally ill and that this fact had been concealed from him. He told Dykes the real position and invited him to stay at Le Court.

Cheshire learned nursing skills and was soon approached to take in a second patient, the 94-year-old bedridden wife of a man whose own frailness meant he could no longer care for her himself. She was followed by others, some coming to stay and others to help. Although Le Court had no financial support, and was financially perilous most of the time, money somehow always seemed to arrive in the nick of time to stave off disaster. By the time Arthur Dykes died in 1948, there were 24 people staying at Le Court.

On Dykes's death, Cheshire, a lapsed Christian but one whose faith had been stirring for a while, sat by his bed and picked up the Bible. Soon afterwards he converted to the Roman Catholic Church.

Cheshire dedicated the rest of his life to supporting disabled people, combining this with lecturing on conflict resolution.

In 1948, he founded The Cheshire Foundation Homes for the Sick, which, in 1976, became the Leonard Cheshire Foundation, now styled Leonard Cheshire, which continues his work to support disabled people globally.

It provides support to disabled people through a variety of different services including care at home, residential care and training and developing to disabled people throughout the world. It is described on its factsheet as "the UK’s leading voluntary sector provider of support services for disabled people". Its goal is to change attitudes to disability and to serve disabled people around the world ([3]). A recent controversy has broken out when efforts to change the charity's name were suggested. [4]

On 15 July 1941 Cheshire married an American actress, Constance Binney, but this marriage was short-lived. Then, on 5 April 1959, in Bombay's Catholic Cathedral, he married Sue Ryder, also the founder of a charity; they had two children, Jeromy and Elizabeth Cheshire and lived in Cavendish, Suffolk.

In 1950 he became one of the vice presidents of the Eagle Club, one of Britain's most popular juvenile publications of the 1950s.

In 1991 he was given a life peerage as Baron Cheshire, of Woodhall in the County of Lincolnshire, sitting as a cross-bencher. He lived through his final illness (motor neurone disease) with exemplary spiritual fortitude.

Queen Elizabeth II paid personal tribute to him in her Christmas message to the Commonwealth in December 1992. In the 2002 BBC poll to find the 100 Greatest Britons, Cheshire attained position number 31. His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Imperial War Museum (London, England).

Former Pink Floyd member Roger Waters once described Cheshire as "the only true Christian I've ever met."

Notes
  1. ^ Morris 2000, p. 225.
  2. ^ BBC scrapbook 1945 Fontana, 463 016 FDL
  3. ^ Leonard Cheshire
  4. ^ Family of war hero Cheshire try to halt charity name change
Bibliography
  • Boyle, Andrew. No Passing Glory: The Full and Authentic Biography of Group Captain Cheshire, V.C., D.S.O, D.F.C. . London: Fontana Books, 1955.
  • Braddon, Russell. Cheshire, V.C. London: Evans Brothers Ltd., 1954.
  • Brickhill, Paul. The Dam Busters. London: Pan Books, 1983. ISBN 0-33028-083-X.
  • Cheshire, Leonard. Leonard Cheshire V.C. Bomber Pilot. St. Albans, Herts, UK: Mayflower, 1975 (reprint of 1943 edition). ISBN 0-583-12541-7.
  • Fuller, Reginald C., ed. Crossing the Finishing Line – Last Thoughts of Leonard Cheshire VC. London, 1998.
  • Harvey, David. Monuments to Courage. Uckfield, East Sussex, UK: Naval & Military Press Ltd., 1999. ISBN 1-84342-356-1.
  • Laffin, John. British Vcs of World War 2: A Study in Heroism. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: Sutton Publishing Limited, 1997, ISBN 0-7509-1026-7.
  • Morris, Richard. Cheshire: The Biography of Leonard Cheshire, VC, OM. London: Viking Press, 2000. ISBN 0-670-86736-7.
  • The Register of the Victoria Cross London: This England, 1997. ISBN 0-90632-427-0.
  • The Times, 28 October 1978, Obituary for Prof. G.C. Cheshire

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