Weather: fine with occasional mist
Fighter Command Serviceable Aircraft as at 0900 hours:
- Blenheim – 64
- Spitire – 216
- Hurricane – 345
- Defiant – 24
- Gladiator – 4
- Total – 653
German raids began mid-morning with yet another attack on West Malling which succeeded in putting the place out of action until the 20th.
At noon, 3 further raids developed comprising of over 350 aircraft. Two waves of aircraft were headed for the Thames Estuary and Dover. A third wave was coming across from Cherbourg and making its way towards Portsmouth and Southampton aiming in particular for Tangmere. Many of the bombers managed to avoid contact with the RAF fighters sent up to intercept them and pressed on to their targets. A number of London suburbs were hit. Established airfields such Harwell and Farnborough were attacked. Meanwhile, the aircraft from Cherbourg had reached the south coast and headed in separate directions towards targets such as Tangmere, Lee on Solent and Gosport. Tangmere was badly damaged and twenty people lost their lives and several aircraft on the ground were destroyed. Ventnor was once again a target, this time by 5 Ju87s which made a pinpoint bombing attack. This attack put Ventnor out of action till 23rd August.
However, numerically, the most damaging attack that afternoon was on a training command airfield, Brize Norton. Over 50 aircraft were destroyed, several hangars were completely obliterated and a number of casualties were caused. This damage was the work of 2 Ju88s.
The Luftwaffe that day put up just over 1700 sorties for the loss of 45 aircraft. The RAF lost 22 planes and a large number of aircraft destroyed on the ground which included over 10 Hurricanes. Although the Luftwaffe had hit 8 airfields, their intelligence had been inaccurate as only three of them were Fighter Command airfields.
54 Squadron Operational Record Book – 16 August
Another engagement with the enemy when a large formation of Do 215s escorted by He 113s and Me 109s was encountered very near Hornchurch. 2 Me 109s (by Colin Gray in celebration of his DFC) and 1 He 113 (FO McMullen) all destroyed and 2 bombers and a fighter damaged for no loss on our part was a most satisfactory hour’s work.
249 Squadron Operational Record Book – 16 August, Boscombe Down
A formation of Me109s were seen and Red Section, Flt Lt Nicholson, PO MA King, Sqdn Ldr King were ordered to investigate. Red Section unfortunately bought it, being heavily attacked by fighters. Flt Lt Nicholson, Red I was hit by a cannon shell and his aircraft caught fire. Flt Lt Nicholson remained in the cockpit in order to get a burst at a Messerschmitt 110 which appeared in front of him. He was then forced to abandon aircraft owing to the heat. He made a successful descent, but when about 40 feet from the ground he was fired at by a member of the LDV. He was very badly burnt and taken to Royal Southampton Hospital. PO MA King, Red 2 was attacked at the same time, and also abandoned his aircraft. His parachute had been severely damaged however by a cannon shell, and collapsed during the descent. Pilot Officer King was killed. Sqdn Ldr King’s aircraft was hit in several places but he was able to return to base.
Note – Flt Lt Nicholson was subsequently awarded the VC – the only member of Fighter Command to receive this honour.
Reported Casualties (RAF Campaign Diary 16th August 1940):
* Enemy: 75 confirmed, 29 probable, 41 damaged
* Own: 22 aircraft of which 14 pilots are safe
Todays’s theme: The Squadrons – 249 Squadron

9 comments
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August 16, 2010 at 9:01 am
Mark
FL Nicholson was sadly lost over the Indian Ocean when a passenger on a flight that did not return.
His name is on the Singapore Memorial
But as he attended Tonbridge School they have a wonderful memorial to him, and as a member of the Battle of Britain Historical Society I organised our Society Memorial Plaque at Tonbridge.
On returning home by train I read the sad story that his wife was having to sell memorabilia items she had retained.
She was then living in Tadcaster Yorkshire.
Photographs exist of them when he was based at nearby Church Fenton
August 16, 2010 at 7:18 pm
Alfred W Thorne
FL/LT Nicolson shot up a BF109, I was fitness to the dogfight and can confirm this, as i saw the plane descend and make a wheels up landing in a cow’field at the Leigh Rd. / Oakmount Rd. junction at Eastleigh Hants. I was on the scene shortly after and was able to free a piece that hung down from the wing. It was what i now know to have been,- the stbd. aileron balace weight ‘trut’, which had snagged the cattle fence. The plane was removed under cover of darkness, and i am led to believe that it was taken to Eastleigh Airport, where it was repaired and flown for evaluation purposes. I was 76 in January.
August 16, 2010 at 7:22 pm
Alfred W Thorne
That of coarse, should read — balance weight ‘Strut’
August 29, 2010 at 11:28 am
Tony Rudd
Thank you for this marvellous reminiscence.
August 16, 2010 at 9:02 pm
scott
Mark – When was FL Nicholson, VC lost over the Indian Ocean? Did he recover from the burns and fight on in the Battle of Britain? Thanks.
August 17, 2010 at 11:20 am
Mark
Nicholson was moved to RAF Hospital Halton and in November was convalescing at Torquay so was not in the BOB again
Posted to India early 1942
Aug 4 1943 command of 27 Squadron
Aug 11 1944 posted to HQ TAF Bengal awarded DFC as Wing Commandor
April 1945 Staff at HQ Burma
May 2nd 1945 went as Observor on Liberator from Salbani and when 100 miles south f Calcutta when one engine caught fire.Crashed into the sea, only 2 NCO survivors
August 17, 2010 at 12:21 pm
scott
Thanks for the update on Nicholson. This site, and the comments are priceless.
August 17, 2010 at 3:16 am
David LaJuett
Two other really notable events on this day:
– the crash landing at Tangmere of a Hurricane flown by Pilot Officer W.M. “Billy” Fiske, after a fight with the Ju 87s. Fiske, a ‘dashing, wealthy former captain of the U.S. bobsled team at the Winter Olympics of 1928 and 1932″* died of burns 2 days later. He was the first American killed in action during the war.
– the historic visit of Churchill to Keith Park’s Ops Room at 11 Group HQ, Uxbridge. Hastings Ismay, CHurchill’s Chief of Staff, who had accompanied the Prime Minister, later wrote,
“There had been heavy fighting throughout the afternoon, and at one moment every single squadron in the Group was engaged; there was nothing in reserve, and the map table showed new waves of attackers crossing the coast. I felt sick with fear. As the evening closed in, the fighting died down, and we left by car for Chequers. CHurchill’s first words were “Do not speak to me; I have never been so moved.” After about 5 minutes he leaned forward and said “never in the field of human combat has so much been owed by so many to so few.” The words burned in my brain and I repeated them to my wife when I got home.” *
* With Wings Like Eagles, Michael Korda, Harper, 2009.
September 4, 2010 at 7:02 pm
Gerald Broadhead
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