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Jim-Holmes

A veteran interview with

Jim Holmes

Jim Holmes served in 246 Field Company, Royal Engineers. He had an eventful time in Normandy and gives a good account of himself.

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Home | Veterans | Jim Holmes

A veteran interview with

Jim Holmes

Jim-Holmes

Jim Holmes served in 246 Field Company, Royal Engineers. He had an eventful time in Normandy and gives a good account of himself.

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Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Holmes, Jim. A Veteran Interview with Jim Holmes. Interview by Unknown. Legasee, n.d. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jim-holmes/. Accessed 13 Jun. 2026.
APA Style:
Holmes, J. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Jim Holmes [Interview by Unknown]. Legasee. Retrieved June 13, 2026, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jim-holmes/
Chicago Style:
Holmes, Jim. n.d.. A Veteran Interview with Jim Holmes. Interview by Unknown. Legasee. Accessed June 13, 2026. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jim-holmes/
Harvard Style:
Holmes, J. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Jim Holmes. [Interviewed by Unknown]. Legasee. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jim-holmes/ (Accessed: 13 June 2026)
Vancouver Style:
Holmes, J. A Veteran Interview with Jim Holmes [Internet]. Interview by Unknown. Legasee; n.d. [cited 2026 Jun 13]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jim-holmes/
An interview with

Joseph ‘Stamper’ Metcalf

Stamper remembers his missions in Nuremberg and Dresden as part of the Bomber Command in the Royal Air Force

Stamper decided to join the Royal Air Force after experiencing a biplane land close to his school in Settle Yorkshire. He joined up at RAF Cardington, before being posted overseas to Southern Rhodesia. He returned to East London 48 Air School to train as a bomb aimer, before returning to Rhodesia with 101 Squadron, where he unfortunately caught malaria. After losing his crew whilst in hospital he was posted to 100 Squadron at RAF Grimsby, Lincolnshire. Stamper was stationed in Bulawayo South Africa for desk-based training in the IWT (Initial Training Wing) then at Mount Hampden for navigation and flying training school. He returned to England and went to Whitley Bay for more training, then formed a crew with two others. Their first operation was to sink a large German force off the Dutch coast.  He flew in a Lancaster Bomber explaining how safe it felt compared to other bomber aircraft. Stamper describes his experiences in the Nuremberg raid where Bomber Command lost ninety-seven out of a force of two hundred and fifty after passing the main route of enemy night fighters. He recalls the Dresden raid targeting railway martialling yards, which resulted in a firestorm. Stamper later took part in Operation Manna, dropping food parcels to the starving Dutch population, and remembers tying chocolate for the children in his handkerchief. After the war, the crew felt something was missing for them, so they formed the 100 Squadron Association and Stamper became the first treasurer. The Association unveiled a memorial at Holton le Clay near RAF Grimsby with Stamper giving the dedication each reunion.
Photo Gallery icon 17 Photos
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

Gordon Dixon

An RAF AC1 describes growing up in the Liverpool Blitz and managing German colleagues during the Berlin Airlift

During the Liverpool Blitz, Gordon frequently sheltered from air raids and wore gas masks in school lessons. When the war ended, he recalls people drinking in celebration and making street bonfires from the remnants of bombed buildings. Upon finishing his school exams, Gordon was called up to national service, where he trained as a Clerk GD. After some confusion surrounding his first posting, he was sent to help with the Berlin Airlift at Bückeberg. Following a turbulent flight to Germany, Gordon sought out his assignment. Despite never having left Britain before and with little guidance, he eventually found the medieval palace where 46 Group was headquartered. Gordon describes the ornate building, his German colleagues, and their difficult postwar living conditions. He befriended Heinz, a 19-year-old former member of the Hitler Youth who took him around the village and to local festivals. Gordon was later sent to Lüneburg, where RAF servicemen often clashed with the Army’s Royal Scots Greys regiment. He spent his days running the office, filing documents and communicating with different departments. While many of his contemporaries saw their national service as a waste of time, Gordon fondly remembers experiencing foreign travel and exciting opportunities.
Photo Gallery icon 6 Photos
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker