Remarkable image shows RAF hero Douglas Bader posing on Bournemouth beach

Aileen Grace Wise is held aloft by Bader and friends Aileen Grace Wise is held aloft by Bader and friends

AN EXTRAORDINARY photograph has been uncovered of RAF hero Douglas Bader on Bournemouth beach, the year before he lost his legs.

The photo, taken in the summer of 1930, shows Aileen Grace Wise being held aloft by Bader on the sands.

Aileen was just 17 at the time and the photograph was found by her daughter Diana Ruffell amongst her late mother’s papers.

She said: “I feel that a large part of the significance of the photograph lies in the fact that his legs are still visible.”

At the time the photograph was taken, Bader was 20 and had only just been commissioned into the RAF.

In December 1931, he had both legs amputated after crashing while attempting low-level aerobatics.

He was then incredibly re-commissioned in 1939 and went on to become one of the most revered pilots of the Second World War.

In 1941, he bailed out of his Spitfire over German-occupied France.

He made a number of attempts to escape German captivity and was sent to the notorious Colditz Castle prison camp, where he remained until it was liberated in 1945.

A 1956 film, Reach for the Sky, told the story of his flying career.

Aileen went to Singapore in the early 1930s, where she met and married Diana’s father Forbes Wallace, a commissioner in the Federated Malay States Police Force. When the Japanese invaded Malaya in 1941, Aileen and her daughter escaped via Kuala Lumpur to Singapore and were later evacuated to South Africa. Diana’s father fought down the Malayan Peninsula before the Allies capitulated and he spent the rest of the war in Changi POW Camp.

Comments(7)

Arjay says...
12:09am Fri 14 Sep 12

I remember going to see 'Reach For the Sky' as a 7 year old in 1956. First 'proper' film I'd ever seen. What a hero, I thought.
It was only many years later, when I met a man who had been a POW with Bader, that I Iearned that, in common with many modern 'celebrities', the man had a huge ego, that didn't always endear him to his fellow prisoners!
Nevertheless, a fighter pilot with no legs?... the kind of hero that was 'manna from heaven' for the wartime propaganda machine!
A remarkable man, by any accounts..

Mike Pickering says...
1:08am Fri 14 Sep 12

I heard that he used to live in Bader Road in Canford Heath, and that he'd made them change the name of the street to that.
The staff in Sperrings used to tell me that he'd been in, but I'd just missed him.

Square Old Codger says...
9:21am Fri 14 Sep 12

A great man and a pioneer in the field of seeking equal rights for the disabled. Had he been born later I am sure that he would have been a competitor in the Para Olympics.

time nor Tide says...
9:54am Fri 14 Sep 12

I was told of a prisoner at the "notorious" Colditz that did his degree by correspondence, through a British university. Exams and lessons were relayed legitimately through Swiss intermediaries. This chap had also been a part of the great escape and Colditz was his punishment. A British degree as an Architect his reward for good behaviour. He practised as one for the rest of his life.One of the few good outcomes of WW2?

elite50 says...
11:38am Fri 14 Sep 12

The story is about Baders legs but look at Aileen's.
What a stunner, even if the picture is 82 years old!

Franks Tank says...
1:35pm Fri 14 Sep 12

Photo was taken just before a council busy body approached the youths and told them to stop larking around for 'elf-'n'-bleeding-sa
fety-reasons.

Bob49 says...
7:14pm Fri 14 Sep 12

Franks Tank wrote:
Photo was taken just before a council busy body approached the youths and told them to stop larking around for 'elf-'n'-bleeding-sa

fety-reasons.
er, there wasn't 'no win, no fee' in those days

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