Auction Catalogue

11 October 2023

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Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria

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Lot

№ 250 x

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11 October 2023

Hammer Price:
£1,600

A good Second War A.F.C. group of seven awarded to Flight Lieutenant S. D. Walbank, Royal Air Force, who completed an operational tour as a Hurricane nightfighter pilot 1941-42, sometimes flying solo low-level sorties to France

Air Force Cross, G.VI.R., reverse officially dated ‘1944’; 1939-45 Star; Air Crew Europe Star; Burma Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45; General Service 1962-2007, 1 clasp, Malay Peninsula (Flt. Lt. S. D. Walbank, R.A.F.),mounted court-style, contact marks, generally very fine (7) £1,800-£2,200

Glendining’s, December 1988; Dix Nooonan Webb, March 2008 and September 2015.

A.F.C. London Gazette 8 June 1944.
The original recommendation states: ‘This officer has been employed on Anti-aircraft Co-operation duties since October 1942. He had previously completed an operational tour with a Hurricane Night Fighter Squadron. During the time he has been employed on Anti-aircraft Co-operation work he has displayed exceptional devotion to duty and keenness in carrying out the tasks allotted him. He has completed over 100 hours night flying on Search-light Co-operation - much of it under adverse conditions. Flying Officer Walbank is a competent pilot who has shown the greatest keenness to fly at night.’


Stanley Douglas Walbank was born in Bradford in September 1917 and commenced his operational career as a Sergeant Pilot in No. 87 Squadron, a Hurricane nightfighter unit operating out of Charmy Down, and St. Mary’s in the Scillies, in March 1941. A few days later, with operations limited as a result of poor weather conditions, the Squadron’s Operational Record Book (O.R.B.) reported that ‘Two new Sergeants unfortunately overshot and made the aerodrome look rather like a salvage dump’, therein, possibly, the reason for Walbank’s transferral to No. 247 Squadron that April, although as we shall see, he was in fact a capable pilot.

Also by that stage allocated to night fighting duties in Hurricanes, 247 went fully operational on moving to Predannack that summer, but a spate of convoy patrols filled the void, Walbank flying three such sorties on 27 May alone. So, too, by way of proving his skills, 25 minutes of aerobatics on 20 July, an episode made possible by using a brake-test as his excuse to get airborne - ‘a rather dubious excuse, one might add’, according to the O.R.B. And the occasional “Scramble” - and numerous “Rhubarbs” and “Intruders” - followed in the period leading up to his posting to anti-aircraft co-operation duties with No. 286 Squadron in October 1942, the O.R.B. crediting him with carrying out a solo “Intruder” operation to Morlaix and Lannion in October, the same month that he was sent to Colerne to gain experience with Havoc “Turbinlite” aircraft.

But it was really after the Squadron moved to Exeter in May 1942, that the pace of cross-channel operations quickened, Walbank’s outings including a trip to Rennes in June, when his Hurricane was engaged by an E-Boat on his return to the coast - ‘He hit back and saw strikes on the vessel, the return fire ceasing, and landed back at Exeter at 0430 having carried out the whole operation between 200 and 500 feet’. While on other occasions suitable targets were frustratingly scarce:
‘Flight Sergeant Walbank took-off at 0200 to intrude on the St. Briene-Rennes railway. He had quite an interesting trip, although an unproductive one. Near Lamballe he saw a well lighted chateau with two men standing on the front steps. He restrained a strong desire to shoot them up, in case they were French, and moved on. At Montauban, and again near Rennes, he saw a train, but in both cases left them alone, as they were passenger trains - although probably full of Hun troops. He toured around a bit longer, both along the main line and up and down the branch line from Rennes to St. Malo. Eventually, he left the country at Painpol, having been over enemy territory for an hour’ (247’s O.R.B. refers).


Taking into account such low-level, solo, night forays over enemy occupied territory, it is perhaps not surprising that 247’s O.R.B. describes Walbank as one of the Squadron’s best pilots, nor, too, that he was consequently selected to serve in No. 536 Squadron, a newly formed Hurricane-Havoc “Turbinlite” co-operation unit, that September. Yet, if the O.R.B’s comments are anything to go by, he must have been mighty relieved to be re-mustered with No. 286 Squadron a few weeks later:
‘The forming of 536 Squadron unfortunately lost us Flying Officer Hamilton, and Flight Sergeants Walbank and MacKay, who were posted as permanent Hurrie satellites. In view of the piss poor, repeat, piss poor, opinion held by all and sundry of Havoc co-operation duties, our sympathies go out to these types. We are sorry to lose them.’


Awarded the A.F.C. for his subsequent services in No. 286 (Anti-aircraft Co-operation) Squadron 1942-44, in which period he was commissioned as a Pilot Officer, presumably Walbank was next transferred to the Burma front. Having then been placed on the Reserve at the War’s end, he obtained a regular commission as a Flight Lieutenant in May 1948, served in the Malay Peninsula in the mid-1960s, and was finally placed on the Retired List in July 1969.

Sold with the recipient’s original Buckingham Palace forwarding letter for his A.F.C.; and copied research.