Page 51 - Memorial Groves
P. 51

PLAQUE NO 81:    PLAQUE NO 82:

 Plt/Off Charles Henry (Harry)   Fl Lt Robert Graham Fox (1932-34)

 Broomhall (1931-33)   203 Squadron RAF

            Killed in Aircraft Accident: Middle East
            5 Nov 1943. Age 26
 454 Squadron RAAF
 Killed In Action: Libya
 June 1943. Age 25   Graham started his schooling at Guildford and transferred to Hale in 1932 when the family moved to
            Claremont. A School contemporary recorded that:  ‘he was a good swimmer and played games with
 Harry lived in Cottesloe and attended Hale School from   gusto and without finesse. He was a very likeable cove with a sense of humour as subtle as an axe!’
 1931 to 1933. He was a keen tennis player and rower.   His nickname at School was ‘Fatty’ but his report card records that was a ‘fine type’; a strong
            character. He excelled at football and was a very good boxer too.
 After leaving School he joined the Commonwealth Bank
 and prior to joining the Royal Australian Air Force he was   He joined the shipping department of Elder Smiths after leaving School and became a stalwart
 on the relieving staff in Narrogin, Bridgetown and Mount   of the Hale Old Boy’s Hockey Club. He joined up in 1939 and was one of the early trainees in the
 Magnet.    Empire Air Training Scheme.

 He trained as a navigator and was taken on the strength   After his initial flying courses at Cunderdin, Pearce and Geraldton, Graham was posted to the
 of number 203 Squadron of the British Royal Air Force in   Middle East in late 1940 as a Pilot Officer. He flew twin-engined Wellington bombers from Malta
 May 1942, flying in Baltimore bomber aircraft. He later   with number 203 Squadron, Royal Air Force. Later he was promoted to a flight commander and flew
 transferred to an Australian Squadron, number 454 later   Blenheim bomber aircraft in North Africa and Lebanon. One source records that Fatty would never
 that year, in October.   fly back to base with any spare ammunition. After a bombing raid he would always chase any enemy
            aircraft in his vicinity.
 He was killed after a take-off in Libya.
            After surviving two years of sometimes hazardous operational flying (he was shot down on several
 Dedicated by his family  occasions and managed to walk back to his base through enemy lines) he was killed in an aircraft
 Placed by his sister Mrs Dorothy House,   accident while test flying one of the squadron aircraft alone.
 assisted by her daughters, Deborah House
 and Nathalie Haymann.  Dedicated and placed by Mr Owen Burges (1931-33), also a member of aircrew during the Second
            World War. He and Graham and Harry Broomhall were all close friends at School.



            ‘he was a good swimmer and played games with gusto and without


            finesse. He was a very likeable cove with a sense of humour as


            subtle as an axe!’
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