101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legend

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Rusty at 98 with replica of his plane (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
Rusty at 98 with replica of his plane (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)

When Russell “Rusty” Waughman first flew daring, heart-stopping bombing raids over Nazi Germany, he wasn’t much more than a boy full of bravado.

When he died last month, he was one of the last pilots of Bomber Command, up there with the most dangerous assignments of World War II. And it wasn’t lost on those who attended the memorial service for the veteran last week that he was just one month shy of turning 101 – the number of the Special Duty Squadron in which he served. That Rusty even survived the war, let alone lived to see his 100th year, is in itself remarkable.

The lifespan of a typical airman in 101 Squadron was just a handful of sorties. Their Lancaster Bombers were equipped with a special apparatus that searched out and then jammed enemy radio transmissions. But that also allowed German Luftwaffe to track and attack them, and the squadron suffered the highest casualties of any, losing 1,176 aircrew killed in action.

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legend qhiddqitdikkinvBombs are dropped from an RAF Lancaster (SSPL via Getty Images)

When Rusty’s crew completed their set of 30 operations, they found out they were the first from the squadron to survive a full tour for more than six months.

“Survival was 99% luck,” he later said. “We had bits shot off us and holes knocked into us. It was a very strange feeling because we were all genuinely convinced we’d all be killed, it was just a matter of when.”

Red Arrow pilot forced to send out emergency alert after bird smashes into jetRed Arrow pilot forced to send out emergency alert after bird smashes into jet

Born in County Durham and plagued with ill-health from childhood tuberculosis as he grew up, Rusty had meant to sign up for the Navy when war broke out. But when he saw that the naval recruiting officer was his own doctor and most likely would not approve him, he went next door and joined the RAF instead. He was only 18 when he earned his wings and just 20 when, in November 1943, he flew his first operation, straight to Berlin.

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendRusty (right) and member of crew (Jonathan Buckmaster)

“We’d only just got over Europe when we had five fighter attacks, one after another,” he recalled in video recordings in the International Bomber Command Centre Digital Archive, managed by the University of Lincoln. “Our rear gunner Harry Nunn, who was Canadian, basically kept us alive.”

When, on his next sortie as he flew over the Ruhr region for the first time, Rusty remembered his terror as he saw the searchlights, German fighters and the heavy flak.

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendRusty’s goggles and headgear (Jonathan Buckmaster)

“My knees were shaking, I was shaking... I really was terrorised. So I dropped my seat so I couldn’t look out and funnily enough, I don’t know why, but I said a little prayer that my mum and dad used to say when I was about six years old by the side of the bed, which ended, ‘If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul will take’. And I said this little prayer, and the terror disappeared. I raised my seat and carried on. I was still apprehensive and frightened, but the terror went.”

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendRusty earned wings at 20 (JONATHAN BUCKMASTER)

But Rusty’s brushes with death got closer with each mission, as the squadron, flying out of RAF Ludford Magna in Lincolnshire, stepped up their raids ahed of D-Day.

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendThe Lancasters were a vital cog for RAF (Print Collector/Getty Images)

During one sortie, Rusty and his crew fortunate to survive when, after they had attacked a German tank depot, another Lancaster exploded right underneath them, blowing them upside down. He remembered: “We lost about 10,000ft and our wireless operator, little Taffy, ended up with the contents of the pee can tipped all over him. He wasn’t exactly flavour of the month, I can tell you.”

Another time they were hit by anti-aircraft fire over Stettin and had to fly back to base without two engines, arriving home so late they were presumed dead. “The committee of adjustment had been in and started to take our kit away.”

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendRusty’s array of war medals (Jonathan Buckmaster)

His final sortie was a diversionary raid intended to convince the Germans the Allies would not land in Normandy.

Rusty remained in the RAF after the war and became a highly qualified instructor-examiner with Transport Command, and married Pat Burditt, who died in 1952. He was later remarried to headmistress Diana Lea and the couple had four children. Feeling the Lancaster crews’ contribution to victory wasn’t talked about enough, Rusty never stopped telling his extraordinary stories. And his tenacity was rewarded in 2012, when the RAF Bomber Command Memorial was unveiled in Green Park, London.

101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendBerlin battered (Getty Images)

But the veteran, who was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Force Cross, also admitted that with age his heroics haunted him more. He said: “The unfortunate thing is... you suddenly realise: how many people have I killed? And this came to me very seriously after the war. In 1991, when they were rebuilding Berlin I said to a lady, ‘They’re not doing much to mend that church,’ and she said, ‘No, that’s going to be kept as a memorial to the 260 children who were killed when we were bombed’. And you suddenly realised, I could’ve done that. But, at the time you had no consciousness about it at all, you’re just doing a job.”

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101 Squadron RAF hero Rusty dies at 100 - remembered as daring legendTo Bomber Command in London (Getty Images)

The Veterans’ Foundation hailed Rusty as “not just a pilot, he was a living testament to dedication, courage, and unwavering commitment. His legacy extends far beyond the cockpit, leaving an indelible mark on the hearts and minds of all who knew him.”

  • To see Rusty speak go to the International Bomber Command Centre Digital Archive.

Matt Roper

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