Advertisement

Flight Sergeant Herbert Garth Webster

Advertisement

Flight Sergeant Herbert Garth Webster Veteran

Birth
Maidstone, Maidstone Borough, Kent, England
Death
14 Apr 1941 (aged 24–25)
Tobruk, Al Buṭnān, Libya
Burial
Tobruk, Al Buṭnān, Libya Add to Map
Plot
Joint grave 9. E. 2.
Memorial ID
View Source
Rank: Flight Sergeant
Service No: 519739
Service: Royal Air Force, 73 Squadron
Trade: Pilot
Died: 14th April 1941

"Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few." (Winston Churchill, 20th Aug 1940) Herbert was one of these 'Few', who participated in 'The Battle of Britain' during the Second World War.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Herbert Garth Webster was born in mid-1916 in Maidstone, Kent, the son of Herbert Webster and his wife, only her maiden name of Lees has been recorded.

Webster joined the RAF about April 1935 as an Aircrafthand. In 1939 he applied for pilot training, was accepted and sent for training to 6 OTU Sutton Bridge on 27th May 1940. After converting to Hurricanes he joined 73 Squadron in France on 7th June. The squadron was withdrawn to Church Fenton on the 18th.

Webster was shot down in combat with Me110s over Sheppey on 11th September 1940 and baled out, unhurt. His Hurricane, P2796, crashed at Coldblow Lane, Detling.
On the 15th he damaged a Me109

On 10th November the squadron embarked on HMS Furious for West Africa and flew off to Takoradi on the 29th. The pilots then flew their Hurricanes in stages to Heliopolis via Lagos, Accra, Kano, Maidugari, Khartoum, Wadi Haifa and Abu Sueir.

During December the pilots were attached to 274 Squadron in the Western Desert. The squadron began to operate on its own account in early January 1941.
On the 5th Webster destroyed a CR42 and damaged another.
On 10th April Webster's aircraft was damaged by flak and he made a crash-landing at El Gubbi.

On the 14th April a formation of 66 Axis aircraft, including eight G.50s, attacked British forces stationed in the vicinity of Tobruk. The RAF defenders of 73 Squadron were outnumbered in this engagement, resulting in the Hurricanes, which were only marginally faster than the G.50, having to ignore the Axis fighters and concentrate their efforts upon attacking incoming bombers, which posed the greatest threat. The G.50s were from the 351st Squadron of the 20th Group.

Flying G.50s, Ten. C Cugnasca and Mar. A Marinelli attacked Webster's Hurricane while he was shooting at a Stuka dive bomber, resulting in Webster being shot down and killed over Tobruk. A Canadian pilot, F/O JD Smith, also a Battle veteran, saw the engagement and subsequently shot down and killed both Cugnasca and Marinelli as well as damaging another G.50 before being shot down himself by the G.50's squadron commander.

(the above biography was submitted by Find a Grave Member 'Ray Windlow' ID: 48358091)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rank: Flight Sergeant
Service No: 519739
Service: Royal Air Force, 73 Squadron
Trade: Pilot
Died: 14th April 1941

"Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few." (Winston Churchill, 20th Aug 1940) Herbert was one of these 'Few', who participated in 'The Battle of Britain' during the Second World War.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Herbert Garth Webster was born in mid-1916 in Maidstone, Kent, the son of Herbert Webster and his wife, only her maiden name of Lees has been recorded.

Webster joined the RAF about April 1935 as an Aircrafthand. In 1939 he applied for pilot training, was accepted and sent for training to 6 OTU Sutton Bridge on 27th May 1940. After converting to Hurricanes he joined 73 Squadron in France on 7th June. The squadron was withdrawn to Church Fenton on the 18th.

Webster was shot down in combat with Me110s over Sheppey on 11th September 1940 and baled out, unhurt. His Hurricane, P2796, crashed at Coldblow Lane, Detling.
On the 15th he damaged a Me109

On 10th November the squadron embarked on HMS Furious for West Africa and flew off to Takoradi on the 29th. The pilots then flew their Hurricanes in stages to Heliopolis via Lagos, Accra, Kano, Maidugari, Khartoum, Wadi Haifa and Abu Sueir.

During December the pilots were attached to 274 Squadron in the Western Desert. The squadron began to operate on its own account in early January 1941.
On the 5th Webster destroyed a CR42 and damaged another.
On 10th April Webster's aircraft was damaged by flak and he made a crash-landing at El Gubbi.

On the 14th April a formation of 66 Axis aircraft, including eight G.50s, attacked British forces stationed in the vicinity of Tobruk. The RAF defenders of 73 Squadron were outnumbered in this engagement, resulting in the Hurricanes, which were only marginally faster than the G.50, having to ignore the Axis fighters and concentrate their efforts upon attacking incoming bombers, which posed the greatest threat. The G.50s were from the 351st Squadron of the 20th Group.

Flying G.50s, Ten. C Cugnasca and Mar. A Marinelli attacked Webster's Hurricane while he was shooting at a Stuka dive bomber, resulting in Webster being shot down and killed over Tobruk. A Canadian pilot, F/O JD Smith, also a Battle veteran, saw the engagement and subsequently shot down and killed both Cugnasca and Marinelli as well as damaging another G.50 before being shot down himself by the G.50's squadron commander.

(the above biography was submitted by Find a Grave Member 'Ray Windlow' ID: 48358091)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Inscription

519739 Flight Sergeant
H.G. Webster
Pilot
Royal Air Force
14th April 1941


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement