F/O Robert Henry Jones RCAF

197 Squadron RAF, October 25, 1943 – December 31, 1944

Of the nine Canadians who served with 197 Sqn, eight were shot down (seven KIA and one POW). Canadians provided about eight per cent of the total number of pilots (approx. 112) who flew with 197 Sqn during the two and a half years of its existence but their losses equate to about 20 per cent of 197’s total losses (approx. 40 KIA/POW). F/O Robert Henry Jones, RCAF was one of them.

Robert Henry “Bobby” Jones, born in Calgary, was the son of Mr. Albert Henry (electric powerhouse operator) and Emily Jones of 1623 Bowness Road, Calgary, Alberta. He had one sister, Hazel Kathleen Jones. The family was Anglican.

He started his journey through the BCATP at No. 2 ITS. For October 27, 1941, to December 16, 1941it was recorded: 19/140 in class, 89 per cent, “This airman is calm and self-assured. He has a quiet manner, is dependable and cooperative. Stood 19th in his class and is determined to become a pilot and a good one.”

No. 18 EFTS: January 5, 1942 – March 13, 1942: “This student has made good progress in flying. Inclined to be slow. Is rough on the controls. Judgement and air sense good. Instrument flying: Average. Good on aerobatics.” In Ground Training: “This student is somewhat immature and not a quick thinker. Has to have things explained thoroughly before he learns. Tries hard to improve and if encouraged, will do well at SFTS.”

No. 1 SFTS: March 30, 1942 – July 17, 1942: “Link trainer: 70 per cent: “An average pupil, an average pilot, needs practice on instrument take offs.” For Ground Training he was ranked 35th out of 50 in class: “Slightly below average. Weak in navigation. Worked fairly earnestly throughout and should do better on active duty. Conduct good.” 

After receiving his Pilot’s Flying Badge, Robert Jones was sent overseas on August 7, 1942, and arrived in the UK on August 18, 1942. He was at 3 PRC the next day. He was then at 5 (P) AFU by August 29, 1942. By September 22, 1942, he was at 55 OTU.  At No. 55 OTU, he was evaluated: Ground examinations: 71.5 per cent. Flying Tests 59.8 per cent. Leadership/Character: 65 per cent. “Formation good. Quiet, a good average pilot.”

AT No. 55 OTU, December 6, 1942, Jones was involved in an accident on Hurricane I N3855.

“This pilot was on Dusk Flying practice and failed to receive the recall to land message on the R/T. The weather deteriorated and he crashed into a gently rising hillside. (Normal standard night flying flare path with Flood Light and angle of glide indicator. Flashing beacon NW of Longtown.) This pilot was ordered to carry out dusk landings and take-offs and not to leave the vicinity of Longtown Aerodrome. Unfortunately, he did leave the aerodrome circuit and at that time all the a/c were ordered to land. The weather deteriorated and the pilot became lost and eventually crashed into a hillside, which lucky for him, was on a gentle slope. The causes of this accident are considered to be ‘inexperience’ on the part of the pupil and also sudden deterioration of the weather.” 

After Jones crashed, he came to several hours after landing but could not remember anything, though he had switched off, got out of the aeroplane, removed his parachute, and re-entered the aircraft. He was diagnosed with retrograde amnesia of about seven hours. He had a slight contusion of the right frontal region and minor grazes, plus a concussion. He was given strict rest for ten days, but his amnesia persisted. He was given ten more days of sick leave, expiring on December 29, 1942.

Jones was at No. 3 Delivery Flight Detling, July 1943 and again in September and October before being taken on strength by 197 Squadron on October 25, 1943. On December 31, 1944, Jones was shot down and killed whilst attacking, in the face of intense light flak, troop concentrations in the village of Aalburg. After calling on the R/T that he had been hit by flak, Jones was seen to jettison the cockpit hood but then the aircraft nosed over and dived into the ground.

There was much confusion about the final burial place of F/O Jones. In January 1951, Mr. Jones senior was still questioning the RCAF about the location of his son’s grave. The RCAF replied:

“A report has now been received from our Missing Research and Enquiry Service concerning the resting place of your son, F/O Robert Henry Jones. The report states that Missing Research had been to the cemetery at Vlijmen but could not locate a grave for your son. An exhaustive search was conducted in the area and all cemeteries were investigated but to no avail. The open countryside was also searched and finally, a local resident was found who knew of a British aircraft with a single occupant that had crashed on December 31, 1944. He stated that the crash was near a place called Elshout and that the occupant of the aircraft had been buried in the cemetery at Elshout. This cemetery had already been visited but another visit disclosed a hitherto unlocated grave. The grave was not marked but on exhumation, the occupant was identified as your son … I am sorry indeed that there has been such a lapse of time before it was possible to convey this definite information to you.” 

W/C W. R. Gunn hoped that Mr. Jones would understand that “In times of war and chaotic conditions reports do become erroneous” and that Mr. Jones would find comfort now knowing where his son was buried.

F/O Robert Henry “Bobby” Jones, the grave marked by a headstone, still lies in the Drunen (Elshout) Roman Catholic Churchyard, Netherlands.

Apparently, the aircraft crashed into a flooded area near the village of Vlijmen killing F/O Jones whose body was badly broken. Mr A.J. Gouw, a local resident, waded waist-deep to the aircraft and recovered the body handing it over to allied troops, possibly Canadian soldiers, who were waiting on a nearby road with a lorry. Taken for burial the details of the 1945 Burial Return indicated that F/O Jones had been buried in open country near Vlijmen. Intensive investigation in 1948 and again in 1950 determined that in fact F/O Jones had been buried in the civil cemetery at Elshout. Subsequent exhumation of a previously overlooked unmarked grave in the cemetery revealed that the body within was wrapped in a parachute and clothed in khaki battledress with a pilot’s brevet and F/O braid, thick underpants, a thick white sweater and royal blue sweater and Oxford escape flying boots, plus a mae-west and pieces of a SIDCOT outer. Also found was a wooden cross marked “Unknown British Soldier Pilot RAF, Fallen January 6, 1945”. Though F/O Jones’s identity discs were not found, and the date is inaccurate cross-referencing with other records indicated no other candidate for the remains and it was concluded that the grave was that of F/O Robert Henry Jones RCAF.

F/O Robert Henry “Bobby” Jones, the grave marked by a headstone, still lies in the Drunen (Elshout) Roman Catholic Churchyard, Netherlands.

Robert Henry Jones RCAF J85509

Born: July 26, 1923, died: December 31, 1944

Information reproduced with kind permission from The Typhoon Project. Digitised files from www.ancestry.ca and the Canadian Virtual War Memorial.