Clive Conrad Gesling's story

Clive Gesling was born on Remembrance Day 1924. He was 18 years old when he enlisted in January 1943. He trained in Australia and completed his wireless operator air gunner course on 6 January 1944. He was commissioned as a pilot officer on 26 May 1944.

Clive served with the RAF's No 576 Squadron and recalled the nervousness associated with his first sortie. No 576 was a heavy bomber squadron comprised of Lancaster Mk I and Mk III aircraft. The squadron was part of No 1 Group, RAF Bomber Command, and was based at Elsham Wolds, Lincolnshire. It flew 2788 operational sorties and lost 67 planes, of which two were abandoned over France in 1945.

Clive was commissioned as a flying officer in November 1945 and later became a barrister in civilian life.

Second World War veteran

Transcript

There was no chance of going to sleep

As a wireless operator you had wireless silence all the time when you were on a bombing raid, you know. You took changes of wind, changes of direction. Sometimes you'd be at the places you were to bomb, you just gave that information to the navigator or the pilot.

The only time you could operate the wireless was if you came down in the sea and you wanted the air rescue people to come and rescue you. That was the only time when you were on operations, that was the only time you were allowed to use the keyboard.

So, I mean, on an eight hour flight it was a boring thing sitting there eight and a half hours just listening to stuff coming in and not able to respond. You wouldn't go to sleep when you were flying operations. There was anti-aircraft fire, there were fighters about and all that sort of stuff. You had no chance of going to sleep and besides

A: it was very noisy inside the Lancaster and B: it was quite cold too, so, you know, no chance of you going to sleep.

I remember the first one because, you know, you were sort of inexperienced and nervous to some degree anyhow, you know, and there's anti-aircraft fire exploding all around the plane. When we took the food drop that was in the daytime, all the operations were at night so there were other planes besides you, above you, you know.

When you were over the target dropping your bombs a plane up above you could drop a bomb that could hit you so there were all sorts of dangerous things that could happen to you when you were on a raid.

Lucky to get into aircrew

But I was very lucky actually to get into aircrew.

I turned eighteen in November 1942 and I applied for aircrew and I was called up in January 43 for a medical examination and I was playing cricket and tennis at the time and reckoned I was pretty fit, you know, and the doctor's ticking all the boxes on the form and he came to eyesight, I'd never had any trouble…

[there was] a Japanese book and the pages were sort of in brown and green and then in the centre there was a number and you had to be able to see this number and the doctor was flicking these over and he'd ask me what the number was and he'd say 'Are you sure?' and I knew I was getting them wrong, you see, and then finally after 4 or 5 he said 'Do you want to get into the air force Clive?'

And I said 'Yes'. 'Aircrew?' 'Yes'.

And he said 'Did your father teach at Townsville Boys' School?'

And I said 'Yes'. Big tick for the eyesight.

So, little things can change your life, can't they?


Last updated:

Cite this page

DVA (Department of Veterans' Affairs) ( ), Clive Conrad Gesling's story, DVA Anzac Portal, accessed 26 June 2024, https://nginx-test-anzacportal.govcms7.amazee.io/stories/oral-histories/clive-conrad-geslings-story
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