

The photos you sent brought back much nostalgic memories, I could see again a 20 Year old going into the ‘Starfish’ bunker and sitting outside on Summer nights Smoking my pipe, everything was silent, not possible to think of war going on, the sound of the sea and the cries of sea birds. In spring Range Lane was extremely pretty, Very lovely hedgerows and fields all around. Joe Formby had a little cottage toward the sand hills, he owned asparagus fields. I recall some of the lads helped gather in on off duty days. My first billet was with a lady in Ryeground Lane, A charming person, Mrs Rheam, A big house on the right going down from the Grapes Inn. After a short spell in Ryeground Lane I went to live with Jack and Ruth Murray, a lot of memories of course, they were my second home, parents almost, they looked after me so well. My Wife Mary was billeted with a Mr/Mrs Wenzel, there she (Mary) had been Re-located to Southport from Liverpool after the shocking May Blitz in 1941. Mary was with the War Damage commission, we met on a blind date just after my 21st Birthday in June 1941.
As I write this I can see Formby-Freshfield clearly, I know that my Freshfield Formby is no longer there. It was all so rural then and I have so many good times memories. I remember John Tasker with his little huts among the sand hills . Woodvale had some night fighters, Beaufighters as I recall. My only visit to Woodvale was for a few days in sick quarters with tonsillitis. I re-mustered to Wireless Operator/ Air Gunner, along with a friend Bill Brown, who sadly was lost on the night of the Nuremberg Raid, when we lost 93 aircraft. Due to a spell in Yatesbury RAF Hospital, I was posted to Air Sea Rrescue (ASR), due to temporary downgrade, I made it through.
My time at ASR was altogether different story, not always pleasant , we were either on time or too late and the weather was not like serving in the Bahamas or Capri, Don and I met when I was posted as an Wireless Operator to join an MTB which the Royal Navy had passed over for long range ASR. Don was the electrician and very good too. I learned that he was from Formby when we were in Gibraltar on the way to the Far East for the assault on Japan, The Enola Gay finished it for us, so back we came. After leaving Air Sea Rescue I went to Kirkham where I was put in charge of the Post office section dealing with returned mail from over seas and many airmen came to see me to confirm addresses, many had changed over the war years.
In 1953 I came out to New Zealand as a member of the Royal New Zealand Air Force on a big aircraft from Lyneham, Wiltshire. Served six and a half years in the RNZAF and moved to Christchurch in 1959. We now have 3 daughters and 7 grandchildren all living in Australia. That pretty much sums up things.
Geoffrey Edmonds is now 87 and still lives in New Zealand. I'm very grateful for his contribution to this site. I hope this page goes some way towards paying tribute to a courageous, clearly modest and thoroughly nice gentleman.
Derek