Lance Corporal William H Burrows

17 Sep 1944

William Burrows was born in 1915, the son of William and Cecelia Burrows; and husband of Florence Kate Burrows, of Highbury, London. There were four children of the marriage and a grandson now lives in Glossop.

Dunkirk & Conversion to Airborne

William was a pre-war regular Sapper and served in 9 Field Company in France and Belgium in 1939/40. The Company was deployed in the rearguard actions protecting the Dunkirk evacuation and, on 31 May 1940, they occupied foxholes at Rosendael on the outskirts of Dunkirk. German shelling was continuous and sadly nine members of the unit were killed or wounded by one shell. The 9th evacuated to the beaches where they boarded a Grimsby trawler and stepped on to British soil early on Sunday, 2 June; it became scattered but reformed by the end of June at Monmouth. A move to Chipping Sodbury, Gloucestershire, quickly followed and in August 1940 they were ordered to Bere Alston on the outskirts of Plymouth. Here they sustained casualties during the frequent air raids whilst clearing bomb damage and maintaining essential services. Between September 1940 and January 1941 the Company was based at Bude, engaged in laying mine fields and erecting defences along the coast. The 9th then moved to Wallingford where they took part in exercises until mid-summer when they re-located to Ilminster, and were at Wiveliscombe by the end of the year.

Early in 1942 the Company was selected to train as an airborne unit and during the period of transition was stationed at Bulford. By May 1942 they were re-designated as the 9th Field Company R.E. (Airborne) and, on 19 June 1942, became part of the 1st Airlanding Brigade, 1st Airborne Division. All personnel in the Company were trained as glider-borne troops. About a third of the Company’s strength also trained as parachutists at Ringway, Manchester; their drop zone being at Tatton Park, near Knutsford. Course 14 which ran from 25 May 1942 to 4 June 1942 included 40 men from 9 Field Coy, 38 qualified as parachutists. Other men from the Company followed on later courses. Course 17 ran at Ringway from 7 July to 12 July 1942 and was attended by William Burrows as part of an Air Landing Brigade intake of 9 officers and 136 other ranks, 11 of whom failed. The Air Landing intake trained in parallel to another intake from 1st Parachute Brigade. William Burrows was one of those who passed, completing 2 balloon jumps and 2 aircraft jumps from a Whitley. Later, William was promoted to Lance Corporal.

Twenty volunteers from the Company were amongst the forty-one who died during the ill-fated, glider-borne Operation Freshman on 19 November 1942 to destroy a heavy water plant in Norway. (See separate account on ParaData).

Sicily and Italy

On 16 April 1943 the Company sailed from Gourock, on the River Clyde, in the liner Boissevain bound for North Africa. On 9/10 July 1943, the Company, as part of the 1st Airlanding Brigade, was engaged in Operation Ladbroke, the first of two hazardous glider landings in Sicily. Some men from the 9th assisted in the capture of the Ponte Grande bridge near Syracuse and others in the Company dealt with coastal defences which could be an impediment to the main invasion force. After being relieved by the advance spearhead of the invasion force, on 16 July, they were taken back to Tunisia in Infantry Landing Craft.

On 8 September 1943, the whole Company sailed from Bizerta in the American cruiser U.S.S. Boise for Operation Slapstick, as part of the invasion of mainland Italy, and during the voyage they learned that the Italian forces had capitulated. They landed at the port of Taranto and for the next month they carried out various tasks including repairs to the dock and mine clearance. The 9th later moved forward with the advancing forces and on occasions small parties operated behind enemy lines cutting railway lines thereby denying the Germans reinforcements and supplies. A detachment of eight Sappers under Corporal Roy Allen sailed in an Infantry Landing Craft to Salerno where they cleared about 700 mines from the beaches.

Operation Market Garden

The 9th returned to the UK in SS Duchess of Bedford, landing at Liverpool on 12 December 1943 and moved to Lincolnshire. Company H.Q. was in the village of Tattershall and their billets were in the nearby village of Coningsby. The 9th soon became involved in a series of exercises in preparation for the invasion of Western Europe. In May 1944 the Company moved south to Hurn in Hampshire to prepare the airfield for Operation Overlord (D Day). They extended the runway and carried out other construction work before moving back to Lincolnshire in early June. A number of planned airborne operations were abandoned before the Company was finally redeployed in Operation Market (the Airborne element of Operation Market Garden).

Just after 10.00 hours on Sunday 17 September 1944 sixteen glider and tug combinations took off from RAF Keevil for Arnhem as part of Operation Market Garden. Horsa Glider RJ113 (Chalk 389) was in this group of aircraft and contained 21 men, including William Burrows, from No 1 Platoon 9th (Airborne) Field Company Royal Engineers. The glider was flown by S/Sgt L. J. Gardner and co-pilot Sgt R. A. Fraser from D Squadron, The Glider Pilot Regiment. It was towed by a Short Stirling, No. LK 148 of 299 Squadron, 38 Group.

The tugs and gliders took a course north-west towards Gloucester to pick up Squadrons from Fairford and then headed out over the Severn and Bristol Channels to form up. Here Stirling LK 148 with Horsa Glider R113 took a turn south-west down the Bristol Channel with other aircraft and gliders, and made a turn east over Weston-Super-Mare and headed for Arnhem. 

While over the village of Farrington Gurney an explosion occurred in RJ113 splitting the glider in two. With no tail section the glider lost lift, broke its tow line and crashed into the Double Hills meadow near Paulton killing all occupants. The event was witnessed by the Stirling’s rear gunner who recalls watching the glider falling like a rock to earth after the explosion had occurred.

One villager was in the field picking blackberries at the time of the crash and was injured by flying metal fragments. The Stirling marked the spot by circling until they could see locals running to the crash site. This included Farmer Teak: “When I arrived at the place of the crash I could see that there was nothing I could do. The soldiers had all been killed. It was gruesome.

As a result of the explosion on board William and his comrades became the first casualties of Operation Market Garden. William is commemorated on the Double Hills memorial at the site of the crash along with the other 22 occupants of the glider.

Lance Corporal Burrows died on 17 September 1944, aged 29 years old. He is now buried in plot Y.293 at the Milton Road Cemetery, Weston Super Mare along with other soldiers killed by the crash.

Further Reading:

Pronk, P, Airborne Engineers: The Shiny 9th (2001), R.N. Sigmond Publishing.

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Service History

William H Burrows

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