WATCHING FOR MAIL
Barry Needham has been
impatiently checking his mail each day since recently returning from
Normandy. He will be looking to receive a small parcel containing pieces
from the past. While in Normandy, attending the 60th
Anniversary of D-Day, Barry contacted a group of French hobbyists who make it
their business to track down the remains
of crashed aircraft, both Allied and German, in the Falaise area of Normandy.
They find the sites using official records and from personal sightings at the time of the
crash. In the case of a fatality, a small plaque is mounted with the details ,
pilot’s name, rank and unit. After, they often contact surviving relatives,
many of whom come to visit the memorial.
Norbert Hereau is the one who
found the remains of Barry’s spitfire where it crashed after he baled out on
July 7th, 1944 . Since his
wife died a few years ago, Hereau’s home has become a veritable cluttered
museum with literally thousands of aircraft related
artifacts, including two aircraft engines dug up and carefully preserved under
cover in his back yard. Hereau has been involved in this work since he was 14
years old when he was an active member of the French resistance. He also found
time to become Mayor of Argentan, population 18,000.
One of the cannons dug up from Dad's downed Spitfire |
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