Portsmouth News

‘Inspiratio­nal’ war hero’s possession­s discovered in garden

Cap badge, beret and gas mask of soldier who dived on grenade found

- By BEN FISHWICK Chief reporter ben.fishwick@thenews.co.uk

POIGNANT possession­s of a Second World War soldier who sacrificed himself to save 20 civilians at the Battle of Arnhem have been unearthed by builders 77 years later.

Private Albert Willingham, the son of George and Rose Willingham, of Drayton in Portsmouth, was killed when he jumped on a grenade thrown by a German soldier into a crammed cellar containing 20 Dutch civilians and two wounded British officers.

The grenade was heading directly for Bertje Voskuil and her nine-year-old son Henri before the paratroope­r dove towards it, with the impact of the blast killing him instantly.

Pte Willingham, of the 10th Battalion, Parachute Regiment, was initially buried in the garden of the small detached house in Oosterbeek in September 1944.

The 29-year-old's remains were exhumed and moved to Arnhem Oosterbeek War Cemetery after the war but artefacts including his paratroope­r's red beret, cap badge and gas mask were left behind.

The remnants were dug up eight decades later while the new owners of the property were doing some garden works.

The poignant items also include a hip flask, bullet casings, a magazine for a handgun and British and Dutch coins.

They are set to go on display at the Airborne Museum in Oosterbeek next year. Historian Dilip Sarkar MBE, author of 'Arnhem 1944: The Human Tragedy of the Bridge Too Far', said it was a 'remarkable discovery'.

He said: ' Private Albert Willingham gave his life in a humanitari­an act - a decision made in a nano-second .

'His is, surely, amongst the most inspiratio­nal to arise out of countless brave acts performed during the battles of Arnhem and Oosterbeek.

'It is right that Albert is remembered and this remarkable discovery provides a unique link both to him and that fateful day on which he so freely gave his life to save others.

'The cap badge, beret and gas mask were found at the site of Albert's field grave. They could only be his.'

Mr Sarkar called on Pte Willingham, who has never been officially recognised for his gallantry, to be given a posthumous George Cross.

He said: 'Albert never received any recognitio­n for what he did, and I believe he should be given the George Cross posthumous­ly.

'I floated the idea to the Parachute Regiment and they were supportive but the Honours Committee decided there were so many unrecognis­ed acts of bravery at Arnhem so it would be unfair to single him out.

'But this was a humanitari­an act and there is a difference. He jumped on the grenade knowing what was going to happen and saved many lives in the cellar.

'I don't see why this should not be recognised.'

Alec Wilson, chairman of The Friends of the Tenth, Pte Willingham's unit, said: 'Albert's final act was to protect others in that dreadful place, shielding them from the full force of a German grenade.

'The cellar and the garden in which Albert was buried, together with these artefacts recently unearthed, remind us of the remarkable selfsacrif­ice and bravery of Pte Albert Willingham and all of his comrades in the 10th

Battalion.'

P t e Willingham enlisted in the Dorsetshir­e Regiment, and volunteere­d for the airborne forces, completing his parachute training at RAF Kabrit, Egypt.

Pte Willingham served in the pre-war army and was in Malta at the outbreak of World War Two.

He fought in North Africa, Sicily and Italy before his 10th Battalion were dropped behind enemy lines in the Netherland­s with the 4th Parachute Brigade on September 18, 1944.

They were supposed to push on to Arnhem eight miles away to reinforce Colonel John Frost's small garrison which had seized the northern end of Arnhem Bridge the previous day.

But the Germans blocked their passage and in the end the brigade found itself under siege in Oosterbeek, three miles west of Arnhem.

Pte Willingham was killed on September 21, 1944.

His nephew, David Willingham, said: 'We have nothing but admiration and pride for the man we are proud to say is part of the Willingham family.'

Operation Market Garden saw 10,000 British and Polish paratroope­rs dropped into the Netherland­s to secure key bridges across the Rhine.

The plan was to thrust north through Holland and on into Germany to deliver the final blow to the Nazis, defeating Hitler before Christmas. But only a small force was able to reach the bridge at Arnhem and they were overwhelme­d by the enemy. What ensued was a remarkable, costly rearguard immortalis­ed in the classic film A Bridge Too Far (1977) starring Dirk Bogarde and

This remarkable discovery provides a unique link to him and that fateful day. Dilip Sarkar MBE

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 ?? ?? HUMANITARI­AN ACT Pte Albert Willingham with his Parachute Regiment cap badge which, inset, was discovered; Ivar Goedings inspects Pte Willingham's gas mask, below
HUMANITARI­AN ACT Pte Albert Willingham with his Parachute Regiment cap badge which, inset, was discovered; Ivar Goedings inspects Pte Willingham's gas mask, below

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