Minden Vaughan Blake (13 February 1913 – 30 November 1981) was a New Zealand flying ace of the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the Second World War. He is credited with shooting down thirteen aircraft.
Born in Eketāhuna, New Zealand, Blake earned bachelor's and master's degrees in science from Canterbury University College. In 1936, he joined the RAF after twice missing out on a Rhodes Scholarship and was posted to No. 17 Squadron. He participated in the Battle of Britain in 1940 as acting commander of No. 238 Squadron and then No. 234 Squadron, destroying several German bombers. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in January 1941. By mid-1942, he was commanding a fighter wing. He was shot down on 19 August during aerial operations in support of the Dieppe Raid and became a prisoner of war. He had been awarded the Distinguished Service Order just a few days previously.
After the war, he continued to serve in the RAF in a series of senior posts until 1958. In civilian life, he worked for a number of manufacturing companies. He was also an inventor, developing a golfing aid that was a commercial success. He died in Surrey in 1981, aged 68.
Commencing his tertiary education in early 1932, Blake entered Canterbury University College and gained a Bachelor of Science degree three years later. His father financially supported his studies by purchasing a chicken farm and Blake developed technology for grading eggs. After graduating in 1934, he progressed to graduate studies, studying mathematics. The following year, he was one of the college's two representatives for a Rhodes Scholarship. He was not selected and a subsequent attempt in 1936 was also unsuccessful. In the meantime, he graduated with a master of science with second-class honours. He spent much of 1936 as a lecturer in physics at the university and then applied to join the Royal Air Force (RAF) under its university entrant scheme, intending to study engineering in England once he completed flying training.
In September 1937 Blake was promoted to flying officer and became one of No. 17 Squadron's . In March 1939, Blake received a further promotion, to flight lieutenant, and a few months later, the squadron moved to North Weald where it began converting to Hawker Hurricane fighters. He remained active in pole vaulting, becoming the RAF champion three years running from 1937 to 1939.
For the first several months of the war, the squadron mainly flew from RAF Debden and Martlesham Heath but saw little action during this time. In April 1940, Blake was sent to join the staff at No. 10 Flying Training School at RAF Ternhill in Shropshire; he acted as an instructor in the advanced section of the school. After four months, he was posted to No. 238 Squadron, based at St Eval and operating Hurricanes, to take over as its acting commander. Commencing his new role on 16 August, the squadron was part of No. 10 Group, which covered southwest England.
In the mid-afternoon of 15 September, what is now known as Battle of Britain Day, No. 238 Squadron was scrambled and sent eastwards to help protect London from a large Luftwaffe attack, involving nearly 120 bombers accompanied by over 400 fighters. Blake led the squadron into an engagement with Heinkel He 111 medium bombers over Kenley. He destroyed one He 111, the resulting wreckage crashing on an airfield in Sussex. His own aircraft was damaged in the encounter and he made an emergency landing close by his victim.
Later that month, the original commander of No. 238 Squadron returned to duty. Blake, promoted to acting rank squadron leader, took over as commander of No. 234 Squadron. This was part of No. 10 Group and operated Supermarine Spitfire Mk I fighters from St Eval. Having suffered a number of losses while based at its previous station, Middle Wallop, the move to Cornwall was for a period of duty at a lowered operational tempo, with fewer sorties. On 24 November Blake shared in the destruction of a Do 17 near Falmouth. On 29 November, the squadron provided an aerial escort for the destroyer HMS Javelin, damaged in an encounter with German destroyers, as the ship made its way into Plymouth. Several Do 17s mounted an attack on Javelin but Blake shot down two of these. After the ship arrived in Plymouth, the commander of Javelin, Captain Louis Mountbatten, personally thanked Blake for the squadron's efforts.
In January 1941, Blake's award of the Distinguished Flying Cross was announced. The published citation read:
Blake shot down a Ju 88 south of the Isle of Portland on 8 May, and this was followed by the destruction of a Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter near Swanage four days later. On 10 July, while escorting Bristol Blenheim light bombers on an attack on shipping at Cherbourg, the squadron was attacked by a formation of Bf 109s. Blake managed to destroy two of these but his Spitfire was damaged by enemy fire in the course of the encounter and he was forced to ditch in the English Channel. His aircraft sank before he could extricate himself but he was able to kick free and on reaching the surface inflated his emergency dinghy. He paddled towards England for several hours before being picked by an Air Sea Rescue Services launch.
At the start of August, Blake was made an acting wing commander and appointed leader of the Polish Wing, a fighter wing made up of Polish squadrons, operating from RAF Exeter. His period in command was brief for on 21 September he was appointed wing leader of No. 10 Group's RAF Portreath. One of the last major engagements of the year for Blake was in October, when he led the Portreath Wing to Saint-Omer as part of the escort for Blenheims bombing the town. The RAF was experiencing a high casualty rate by this time, so there was a reduction in offensive missions over the winter months. At the end of the year, he was formally appointed as a temporary wing commander.
Blake continued as commander of the Portreath Wing into 1942 and when offensive fighter operations resumed in March, he led his wing on long-range patrols between Cherbourg and Brest. During this time he was also involved in the development of a Gyro gunsight for fighters. This combined a conventional Reflector sight with aspects of a bombsight, and Blake conducted several tests with the device. In August 1942, his award of the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) was announced, the published citation reading:
A few days later, on 19 August, Blake led the Portreath Wing in support of the Dieppe Raid. Flying cover over the ships of the landing force, they encountered a group of Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighters. Blake, flying with the wing's No. 130 Squadron, destroyed one Fw 190 but his own Spitfire was damaged. His canopy was shattered from a cannon shell impact, and shards of perspex entered his eyes. He ditched his Spitfire in the English Channel, not far from the French coast, and took to his emergency dinghy. Despite the injuries to his eyes, he paddled towards England, helped by an outgoing tide. He spent nearly a day in the dinghy until he was retrieved by a German rescue launch and made a prisoner of war (POW). He was the highest-ranking officer of the RAF to be captured as a result of the Dieppe Raid.
Blake spent most of the remainder of the war at Stalag Luft III, a POW camp located near Sagan, in Nazi Germany. By 1943 he was the senior RAF officer in charge of the camp's Block 104 and it was in this capacity that he met Leonard Trent, a fellow New Zealander with the RAF who had recently become a POW. During their leisure time, Trent introduced Blake to golf, fashioning a home-made golf ball and scrounging a club for practice. In return, Blake taught Trent basic gymnastic techniques, going as far to construct a set of parallel bars. By January 1945, the Soviet forces were advancing into Germany and the POWs at Stalag Luft III were force marched to the west to a camp near Bremen. They were moved again in April but were liberated by the British on 2 May.
In 1950, Blake switched to personnel duties, this time for Bomber Command. A role at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) followed, when he was posted to Oslo as Inspector-General for Northern Command, NATO. During his time in Oslo, he won Norway's Amateur Golf Championship. His final role in the RAF was at the Air Ministry, in a planning position. He retired from the military in January 1958.
In 1979, Blake was a co-author, along with H. J. Weaver, of Suicide by Socialism; published by Springwood Books, this was an assessment of the decline of Britain's economic status in the post-war period and how it could be remedied. In The Bookseller, because of the issues raised, it was described as a "disturbing book".
Blake died in Surrey on 30 November 1981, and was survived by his wife and two children. He is credited with the destruction of thirteen aircraft, three of these being shared with other pilots. He also shared in the damaging of one aircraft. There is a memorial to him at a building at Purley Hospital, where he crashed his Hurricane in the early days of the Second World War. The memorial includes a description of the accident.
Military career
Second World War
Battle of Britain
Circus offensive
Prisoner of war
Postwar career
Later life
Notes
|
|