Derby Telegraph

Airman’s love letters to British sweetheart tell story of WW2 heroism and heartbreak

- WITH CHARLES HANSON

NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN love letters from a Second World War Canadian airman to his British sweetheart – sent from his German prisoner of war camp – are set for auction after being discovered in Derbyshire.

The letters, censored by his captors, shed new light on a heartbreak­ing love story that intrigued visitors to National Trust property Beningbrou­gh Hall in York for decades.

For years people wondered why the names “1942 Gipsy – Olie” were scratched into wood above a fireplace at Beningbrou­gh. The graffiti dated back to the time the Royal Air Force was stationed there in wartime but no one knew who the couple were – until a chance visit in the late 1980s.

The owner of the letters, Karen Plummer, said: “Gipsy (Dot Preston) was my mother. She knew she only had a short time to live and one of her last wishes was to visit Beningbrou­gh Hall where she was billeted in 1941 as an 18-year-old. I took her back there in 1987.

“The staff were thrilled and gave us a tour. One of the guides, Eric Downer, showed her the names etched above a fireplace in the drawing room and asked, ‘Do you know who Gipsy was?’ She knew nothing about it and nearly collapsed. she said: ‘That’s me. I didn’t know he (Olie) had written anything.”

The shock was so intense that in “A Beningbrou­gh Love Story, 1942 Gipsy – Olie”, by Alan Bott, Eric recalled that Gipsy started weeping and needed time to compose herself.

Canadian airman Sgt Harry Olsen was Gipsy’s first love. They met in 1941 and it was “love at first sight”. But though the Second World War brought them together it also wrenched them apart – and broke Gipsy’s heart.

“Mum never spoke about it much but you could see that there was something inside her that was unfulfille­d,” said Karen, 69, a retired musician from Chesterfie­ld.

“She kept the letters in a drawer all of her life and I’ve kept them safe since she passed away at the age of 67 in 1990. I decided I had to do something with them. I don’t want her story to be forgotten. “

The 11 letters and related Second World War RAF war memorabili­a will be offered in Hansons Auctioneer­s’ September 24 Militaria sale, estimate £400-£600. Other items include an autograph book with signatures of pilots, air crew and ground crew at RAF Linton-onOuse and Holme-Moor in Yorkshire.

It includes a note from renowned RAF pilot Wing Commander leonard Cheshire VC, OM, DSO and Two Bars, DFC.

Other memorabili­a includes a 1941-1942 picture of 35 Squadron and PoW objects including rare escape committee items, German pass cards and French money.

Karen does not know when or how Olie gave Gipsy the items. She remembers playing with the foreign money as a child but had no idea where it had come from. She hopes the memorabili­a may be bought by a museum.

The love letters, one with lines blacked out by censors, span 1942 to 1944. They were addressed to Dot’s wartime home in Eckington, where she originated from. The letters could only be short as they had to be written on small pieces of official paper. And, to get past the censors, content had to be kept light, though Olie repeatedly asked Dot to send him a picture of herself.

One of them, dated December 20, 1944, provides an indication of how the romance would play out. Olie wrote: “Dear Dot – Haven’t heard from you for some time. Hope all is well. Say Dot, I heard today that there is a possible chance that we might be going directly back to Canada. If you get any informatio­n about this, will you please send it on to me. Would you send me a photo of yourself, just in case I don’t see you again. Merry Xmas to you. Love Olie”.

Harry met Gipsy late in 1941 at the Alice Hawthorn pub in the North Yorkshire village of Nun Monkton. “It was love at first sight. Everyone who was there that night knew it,” Gipsy recalled. At that time, she was working in the kitchens at Beningbrou­gh. Olie, from Winnipeg, was an RAF tail gunner with 35 Squadron. Love blossomed but it involved many anxious waits for Olie to return from flying missions.

They had only been together about three months when he was posted to RAF Pocklingto­n in Yorkshire.

They were separated but things got worse. On June 8, 1942, Olie’s plane was shot down over Holland. Gipsy was devastated and had a breakdown, according to Karen. She thought Olie was dead. It wasn’t until July 13 that word came through that he was a prisoner of war.

Olie was 26 when captured. He faced solitary confinemen­t, prolonged interrogat­ion, poor food and inadequate conditions.

Sometimes the men slept together for warmth. He was a PoW at Stalag Luft VI at Heydekrug, Lithuania, and later at a labour camp in Essen, Germany. But he had something to pull him through those dark days – Gipsy. They managed to exchange censored letters which he wrote in pencil.

Eventually, Olie was liberated. He returned to England on May 10, 1945 – but never met Gipsy. She said he was in such a state he couldn’t remember her home address.

He tried to contact her through the RAF record office but by the time she received his letter it was too late. He left for Canada on July 8, 1945. There was no way she could afford to go there. They never met again. It was heart-breaking. Gipsy revealed: “We both finished up needing treatment for our nerves”.

With an ocean dividing them, they went on to marry other people.

Olie died from a heart attack aged only 50 in 1967. But Gipsy never forgot him. A poem written by her other daughter, the late Janis Barber, about the 1987 Beningbrou­gh visit reads: “I came searching for your spirit here, at the place where we met and loved so intensely in those desperate war years. My life is almost over now and I have always loved you, never forgotten you and shed so many painful tears … You carved a sweet declaratio­n of our love on the old wooden fireplace. You may as well, my darling, have etched it on my heart.”

There is one strange coincidenc­e that warms Karen’s heart: “Mum went on to have two daughters and Olie had three children. They both, unbeknown to each other, named one of their daughters Karen.”

Charles Hanson, owner of Hansons Auctioneer­s, said: “This story brings a tear to the eye. It is so poignant, so touching. It reminds us all of the terrible pain and sacrifices the generation­s that came before us had to endure. Let’s hope Olie and Gipsy are together again in spirit.”

The lot will be offered in Hansons’ September 24 Medals, Militaria and Firearms Auction. Further entries invited until September 10. To arrange a free valuation, email William Hayward: whayward@hansonsauc­tioneers.co.uk.

 ??  ?? The love story of ‘Gipsy’ Dot Preston and Sgt Harry Olsen was the focus of Alan Bott book ‘A Beningbrou­gh Love Story’ butnow never-seen-letters they wrote to each other during the Second World War are going up for auction next month
The love story of ‘Gipsy’ Dot Preston and Sgt Harry Olsen was the focus of Alan Bott book ‘A Beningbrou­gh Love Story’ butnow never-seen-letters they wrote to each other during the Second World War are going up for auction next month
 ??  ?? of war A number of Sgt Olsen’s letters written at a prisoner was Lithuania after he was captured when his plane camp in captors shot down over Holland, were censored by his
of war A number of Sgt Olsen’s letters written at a prisoner was Lithuania after he was captured when his plane camp in captors shot down over Holland, were censored by his

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