David Blyth Genealogy Pages

John Austin Henry AUSTIN-SMITH

Male 1920 - 2003  (83 years)


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  • Name John Austin Henry AUSTIN-SMITH  [1
    Born 21 Apr 1920  Dannevirke, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Died 11 Oct 2003  Masterton, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Person ID I4  Blyth Family Tree
    Last Modified 31 Mar 2018 

    Father William Alfred SMITH,   b. 6 Jan 1890, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 25 Jun 1949, Dannevirke, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 59 years) 
    Mother Mary SMITH,   b. 1893, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 7 Mar 1961, Dannevirke, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 68 years) 
    Married 19 Jul 1914  Hastings, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    Family ID F28  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Carroll Dorothy AUSTIN,   b. 9 Apr 1922, New Plymouth, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 29 Dec 2010, Masterton, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 88 years) 
    Married Wellington, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Susan Mary AUSTIN-SMITH
     2. Judy Blyth AUSTIN-SMITH
     3. John AUSTIN-SMITH
    Last Modified 31 Mar 2018 
    Family ID F1  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Weekly Feature - 1 November 2003
      A remarkable story finally shared with family
      The death of John Austin-Smith, of Masterton, has brought to life th e p a st of a humble but quite extraordinary man. JOSEPH WALLACE spok e with h i s family and discovered the exceptional story of a wartim e hero. A sto r y filled with humour, intrigue, action and history.
      DURING World War II, in September 1943, the Allied Navy captured the i s l and of Cos in the Aegean Sea. Not long after this success, pilot J ohn A u stin Henry Smith and the crew of squadron 267 delivered import ant back - up equipment and supplies to the battle-weary navy.
      The squadron loaded their DC3s and left the Ramat David airport in Isr a e l, heading for the small island just off the southwest coast of Tu rkey . T he four unarmed supply planes slipped undetected through Turk ey’s ne ut ral south coast before Austin and his squadron landed succe ssfully at C o s airstrip. The four planes spread out over the aerodro me and unloaded t h e naval provisions. Austin finished and returned t o his cabin to prepa r e for the departing flight. He settled into th e cockpit and attempted t o s tart the motors. They refused to turn. T he only other option was to m a nually crank the motors from outside t he aircraft. He returned to the t a rmac and began cranking. That’s wh en he heard five Luftwaffe ME109 fig h ters.
      The German fighters began a strafing run over the airstrip showering t h e i sland with enemy fire. Austin-Smith ran for cover, diving behin d a s ta ck of unidentified drums, soon discovering they were containe rs of fu e l.
      He escaped the petrol explosion, but the attack left three planes utte r l y annihilated. Two were aflame, the other was riddled with bullets . Se v eral men, who were most likely known to Austin, were killed. Hi s crew a n d the surviving crew of the destroyed planes picked their f riends bodi e s from the tarmac and retreated to the only plane intact .
      Austin quickly looked over his aircraft, checking for damage. He disco v e red the plane was hit. The left wing was shot through, resulting i n th e d amage of a foot-wide sheet of its structure. The German fight ers cou ld h ave returned at any time and Austin knew it was not saf e to linger. T h e lives of the remaining crews depended on the swif t departure of the s u rviving plane.
      He acted fast. Leaving the tarmac, Austin climbed on to the wing and r i p ped the shot piece away and discarded it. The aircraft was loade d and e n gines cranked. Austin piloted his wounded DC3 away from th e damaged ai r strip and away from the carcasses of the other three pl anes. Once Aust i n had flown out of immediate danger, he returned t o the cabin to check h i s passengers. They were fine, playing cards a nd using their fallen com r ades as seats to make the journey more com fortable. Austin later repli e d to this thought: “Such is the way o f warfare.”
      John Austin-Smith was known in Masterton for setting up Austins Pharma c y , which was situated in a building on a corner of Queen and Perr y stre e ts, now occupied by Sounds Music.
      To locals he was a nice guy who was a keen golfer known as Austin. Aus t i n’s obituary stated - “NZ402474 RNZAF. 90 Squadron, 267 Squadron . Spec i al OPS, ME Order of the Crown of Yugoslavia 1942, DFC 1943. ” An extrao r dinary history to be briefly mapped out in a small colum n of the paper .
      Inquiries led to a 30-page book.
      Apparently Austin never mentioned the war. Until, aged 82, he was conv i n ced by his family to tell his experience and put it on paper. Wha t eve n tuated was titled Memories of an Airman. J.A.H. Austin-Smith . In it wa s r ecorded the career of a wartime hero as he told it. A s traightforwar d a nd simple account of Austin-Smith’s recollection o f his time in Worl d W ar II.
      Austin grew up in Dannevirke. His family were poor and financially str e t ched through the Depression. His parents struggled to buy books an d un i forms for him to go to college. Money was in short supply and j obs sca r ce. Subsequently, when World War II broke out, it was an exc iting pros p ect for many young men, including a young Austin aged 19.
      He applied for the air force and managed to join by telling a few whit e l i es. Austin said he almost missed out on the air force altogethe r becau s e his urine test failed. He immediately called upon his heal thier brot h er to help out and sent a second sample. His brother pass ed this test a n d Austin was in turn accepted in July 1940.
      Over the next eight months he trained throughout New Zealand before h e a n d his friends were shipped away to Canada aboard SS Awatea. Aust in des c ribed the Awatea journey as “the life of luxury” where he wou ld enjoy “ f ive or six-course meals”. He liked it so much he said h e thought: “Wow , i f this is war, wiz oh, I’m all for it”. Over the n ext few months Aus ti n trained in Canada before he once again departe d, this time for Engl a nd. In England he was prepared as a pilot of t he RAF.
      Austin continued training and was assigned to the new Liberator conver s i on unit, which was to be sent on a special operations job in the M iddl e E ast. He spent only five hours training in the Liberators befo re he a nd h is crew were sent on a long flight to a new base in Fayid . At the t ime , Greece and Yugoslavia lacked communications, the Alli es had no met eo rological or navigational information from the groun d in these countr i es, making flights over this airspace extremely da ngerous.
      Austin and his squadron’s mission was to fly the two Liberators into t h e se fragile conditions dropping wireless operators, saboteurs and s uppl i es to the partisans who lived in the mountains of German-occupi ed Gree c e and Yugoslavia. It was a difficult ask as Liberators wer e 50-ton sup p ly planes only lightly armed and requiring a lot of pet rol for the lon g f lights from Fayid to Yugoslavia and back. They ha d to pack as much e qu ipment and men on each flight as possible. Cons equently the planes we r e stripped of non-essential weight - 95 perce nt of the ammunition was d i scarded, leaving only 100 rounds in the r ear gun turret. Austin said: “ W e were flying all night over enemy te rritory in aircraft that were lit e rally defenceless. It was a cat-an d-mouse operation.”
      The Liberator crews had to be elusive and get out of enemy territory b y d a ybreak or they were prime targets. But the enemy wasn’t the onl y dange r . One particular night Austin flew into cloud that was ful l of “severe i c ing” over the Aegean Sea. The Liberator’s instrument s immediately froz e a nd he became disorientated in the thick cloud . He was unaware of his a l titude and unsure if he was going straigh t or off course. Although the a u topilot was on, Austin said his inst inct was to take the stick and alt e r its level. But this action coul d be deadly. Instead, Austin refused t h e itch to grab the controls a nd stood up from his seat to feel the sit u ation. Everything felt nor mal, so he waited it out while de-icing heat e rs kicked in. It remain ed this way for some minutes for what must have b e en an eternity. Ev entually the instruments came back after an intensel y -nervous wait f or Austin in his blind, drifting aircraft.
      Despite numerous dangers including the weather, anti-aircraft ground f i r e and enemy fighters, Austin wrote: “The thing that caused us th e most c o ncern was a bloody star! Venus!”. It was often mistaken fo r an enemy p l ane. Austin said he knew of some gunners shooting of f a few precaution a ry rounds at the planet, just in case.
      Eventually, after numerous trips, wireless communication enabled the L i b erators to receive weather forecasts and news of the success of th eir d r ops. The flights were known to be some of the most arduous fli ghts und e r extremely difficult conditions. Austin finished these ope rations wit h 4 46 hours of flying. He flew 19 trips to Yugoslavia an d 13 drops into G r eece.
      In recognition for the flights into Yugoslavia Austin was awarded th e O r der of the Crown of Yugoslavia on October 20, 1942. This was fol lowed w i th one of the highest honours awarded to pilots, the Disting uished Fly i ng Cross.
      Austin and his crew were taken off transport duty in October 1943. Th e o d ds must have been in his favour as he was still alive after thi s exten s ive period - of the 56 men he trained with during the earl y stage of t h e war in Canada, only 15 returned home. Perhaps a littl e luck was on h i s side. “Fate played strange tricks in those weird d ays,” he said.
      Austin was assigned to instructing other pilots how to fly large trans p o rt planes. During the course of one morning Austin finished up ins truc t ing another pilot in a Liberator. He finished the lesson and la nded fo r b reakfast. His good friend, Squadron Leader Rolph-Smith, to ok over th e j ob and took the Liberator up for another lesson. Durin g the plane’s f i rst circuit it struck a Hurricane that was coming in to land, it sliced o f f the Liberator’s tail. “All were killed instan tly.” Austin returned t o f ind he was promoted to squadron leader.
      Despite the war and all the experiences that came with it, Austin’s Me m o ries are filled with amusing moments. One is when his good frien d thro u ghout the war, Jacko Madill, sent Christmas correspondence t o his fath e r expressing that he was in need of money. His father rep lied by sendi n g him a Christmas cake that hid the only reliable curr ency at the time - g o ld sovereigns.
      Unfortunately, Jacko’s aunts were also keen to help their nephew’s wa r e f fort. In which case several cakes arrived for Jacko courtesy o f his do t ing aunties. The mass of cakes camouflaged the true identit y of the “r i chest cake”. Austin was called on and together they hack ed up several C h ristmas cakes until they struck gold.
      The war ended in August 1944 and Austin was posted home. He wrote of o n e o f his last experiences - it happened as he was getting ready t o retu rn t o New Zealand. “ I’d finished for the day, was packing u p to go hom e a nd watching the Liberators coming in to land, at night . Thought that b l oke’s low! He was, the next second , CRASH and flam es. So into my litt l e ute, tore up the road about a quarter mile, ra n across a paddock and h e lped pull one guy away from the burning wre ck. He’d hit something, had n o r oof to his mouth and of course no te eth. And boy, was he hot. The am bu lance arrived, popped him in an d I sat on his tummy all the way to ho s pital trying to dig his teet h out of his throat every time he choked. O f ten wonder what happene d to him. Poor devil.”
      The next day Austin left for home. He returned via Morocco to Britain , o n t o the Queen Mary, which shipped him to New York where he remai ned fo r s ix weeks before training across America to San Francisco, t hen on a b o at to Noumea before reaching New Zealand.
      John Austin-Smith left his home town at the age of 19. He travelled th e w o rld and experienced the highs and lows of war, and the comradesh ips th a t were made and lost. He said the memories he made lived in h im foreve r : “They are events I will never forget and experiences an d friendships o n ly war can provide”. He returned home a humble, deco rated hero. As a w a rtime pilot he amassed a total of 1715 flying hou rs. John Austin-Smith p a ssed away last month aged 83.

      -- MERGED NOTE ------------

      Weekly Feature - 1 November 2003
      A remarkable story finally shared with family
      The death of John Austin-Smith, of Masterton, has brought to life thep a s t of a humble but quite extraordinary man. JOSEPH WALLACE spoke wi th h i s family and discovered the exceptional story of a wartime hero .A stor y f illed with humour, intrigue, action and history.
      DURING World War II, in September 1943, the Allied Navy captured the i s l and of Cos in the Aegean Sea. Not long after this success, pilot J ohn A u stin Henry Smith and the crew of squadron 267 delivered import antback- u p equipment and supplies to the battle-weary navy.
      The squadron loaded their DC3s and left the Ramat David airport in Isr a e l, heading for the small island just off the southwest coast of Tu rkey . T he four unarmed supply planes slipped undetected through Turk ey’s ne ut ral south coast before Austin and his squadron landed succe ssfully at C o s airstrip. The four planes spread out over the aerodro me andunloaded t h e naval provisions. Austin finished and returned t o his cabin to prepa r e for the departing flight. He settled into th e cockpit and attempted t o s tart the motors. They refused to turn. T he only otheroption was to m an ually crank the motors from outside th e aircraft. Hereturned to the t a rmac and began cranking. That’s whe n he heard five Luftwaffe ME109 fig h ters.
      The German fighters began a strafing run over the airstrip showering t h e i sland with enemy fire. Austin-Smith ran for cover, diving behind a st ac k of unidentified drums, soon discovering they were container s of fue l .
      He escaped the petrol explosion, but the attack left three planes utte r l y annihilated. Two were aflame, the other was riddled with bullets .Sev e ral men, who were most likely known to Austin, were killed. Hi s crew a n d the surviving crew of the destroyed planes picked their f riends bodi e s from the tarmac and retreated to the only plane intact .
      Austin quickly looked over his aircraft, checking for damage. He disco v e red the plane was hit. The left wing was shot through, resulting i nthe d a mage of a foot-wide sheet of its structure. The German fighte rscould h a ve returned at any time and Austin knew it was not safe t o linger. The l i ves of the remaining crews depended on the swift dep artureof the survi v ing plane.
      He acted fast. Leaving the tarmac, Austin climbed on to the wing and r i p ped the shot piece away and discarded it. The aircraft was loade d and e n gines cranked. Austin piloted his wounded DC3 away from th e damaged ai r strip and away from the carcasses of the other three pl anes. Once Aust i n had flown out of immediate danger, he returned t o the cabin to check h i s passengers. They were fine, playing cards a nd using theirfallen comr a des as seats to make the journey more comf ortable. Austinlater replied t o t his thought: “Such is the way of wa rfare.”
      John Austin-Smith was known in Masterton for setting up Austins Pharma c y , which was situated in a building on a corner of Queen and Perr y stre e ts, now occupied by Sounds Music.
      To locals he was a nice guy who was a keen golfer known as Austin. Aus t i n’s obituary stated - “NZ402474 RNZAF. 90 Squadron, 267 Squadron . Spec i al OPS, ME Order of the Crown of Yugoslavia 1942, DFC 1943. ” An extrao r dinary history to be briefly mapped out in a small colum n of the paper .
      Inquiries led to a 30-page book.
      Apparently Austin never mentioned the war. Until, aged 82, he was conv i n ced by his family to tell his experience and put it on paper. Wha t eve n tuated was titled Memories of an Airman. J.A.H. Austin-Smith . In it wa s r ecorded the career of a wartime hero as he told it. A s traightforwar d a nd simple account of Austin-Smith’s recollection o f his time in Worl d W ar II.
      Austin grew up in Dannevirke. His family were poor and financially str e t ched through the Depression. His parents struggled to buy books an duni f orms for him to go to college. Money was in short supply and jo bsscarc e . Subsequently, when World War II broke out, it was an excit ingprospec t f or many young men, including a young Austin aged 19.
      He applied for the air force and managed to join by telling a few whit e l i es. Austin said he almost missed out on the air force altogethe r becau s e his urine test failed. He immediately called upon his heal thier brot h er to help out and sent a second sample. His brother pass ed this test a n d Austin was in turn accepted in July 1940.
      Over the next eight months he trained throughout New Zealand before h e a n d his friends were shipped away to Canada aboard SS Awatea. Aust in des c ribed the Awatea journey as “the life of luxury” where he wou ldenjoy “ f ive or six-course meals”. He liked it so much he said he t hought: “Wow , i f this is war, wiz oh, I’m all for it”. Over the nex t few months Aus ti n trained in Canada before he once again departed , this time for Engl a nd. In England he was prepared as a pilot of th e RAF.
      Austin continued training and was assigned to the new Liberator conver s i on unit, which was to be sent on a special operations job in the M iddl e E ast. He spent only five hours training in the Liberators befo re he a nd h is crew were sent on a long flight to a new base in Fayid . At the t ime , Greece and Yugoslavia lacked communications, the Alli es had no met eo rological or navigational information from the groun d in thesecountri e s, making flights over this airspace extremely dan gerous.
      Austin and his squadron’s mission was to fly the two Liberators into t h e se fragile conditions dropping wireless operators, saboteurs and s uppl i es to the partisans who lived in the mountains of German-occupi ed Gree c e and Yugoslavia. It was a difficult ask as Liberators wer e 50-ton sup p ly planes only lightly armed and requiring a lot of pet rol for the lon g f lights from Fayid to Yugoslavia and back. They ha d to pack as much e qu ipment and men on each flight as possible. Cons equently theplanes wer e s tripped of non-essential weight - 95 percen t of the ammunition was d is carded, leaving only 100 rounds in the re ar gun turret. Austin said: “ W e were flying all night over enemy ter ritory in aircraft that were lit e rally defenceless. It was a cat-and -mouse operation.”
      The Liberator crews had to be elusive and get out of enemy territory b y d a ybreak or they were prime targets. But the enemy wasn’t the onl y dange r . One particular night Austin flew into cloud that was ful l of “severe i c ing” over the Aegean Sea. The Liberator’s instrument s immediately froz e a nd he became disorientated in the thick cloud . He was unaware of his a l titude and unsure if he was going straigh t or off course.Although the a u topilot was on, Austin said his insti nct was to take the stick and alt e r its level. But this action coul d be deadly. Instead, Austin refused t h e itch to grab the controls a nd stood up from his seat to feel the sit u ation. Everything felt nor mal, so he waited it out while de-icing heat e rs kicked in. It remain ed this way for some minutes for what must have b e en an eternity. Ev entually the instruments came back after an intensel y -nervous wait f or Austin in his blind, drifting aircraft.
      Despite numerous dangers including the weather, anti-aircraft ground f i r e and enemy fighters, Austin wrote: “The thing that caused us th e most c o ncern was a bloody star! Venus!”. It was often mistaken fo r an enemy p l ane. Austin said he knew of some gunners shooting of f a few precaution a ry rounds at the planet, just in case.
      Eventually, after numerous trips, wireless communication enabled the L i b erators to receive weather forecasts and news of the success of th eir d r ops. The flights were known to be some of the most arduous fli ghts und e r extremely difficult conditions. Austin finished these ope rations wit h 4 46 hours of flying. He flew 19 trips to Yugoslavia an d 13 drops into G r eece.
      In recognition for the flights into Yugoslavia Austin was awarded theO r d er of the Crown of Yugoslavia on October 20, 1942. This was follow ed w i th one of the highest honours awarded to pilots, the Distinguis hed Fly i ng Cross.
      Austin and his crew were taken off transport duty in October 1943. Th e o d ds must have been in his favour as he was still alive after thi s exten s ive period - of the 56 men he trained with during the earl y stage of t h e war in Canada, only 15 returned home. Perhaps a littl e luck was on h i s side. “Fate played strange tricks in those weird d ays,” he said.
      Austin was assigned to instructing other pilots how to fly large trans p o rt planes. During the course of one morning Austin finished up ins truc t ing another pilot in a Liberator. He finished the lesson and la nded fo r b reakfast. His good friend, Squadron Leader Rolph-Smith, to ok over th e j ob and took the Liberator up for another lesson. Durin g the plane’s f i rst circuit it struck a Hurricane that was coming in to land, it sliced o f f the Liberator’s tail. “All were killed instan tly.” Austin returned t o f ind he was promoted to squadron leader.
      Despite the war and all the experiences that came with it, Austin’s Me m o ries are filled with amusing moments. One is when his good frien d thro u ghout the war, Jacko Madill, sent Christmas correspondence t o his fath e r expressing that he was in need of money. His father rep lied by sendi n g him a Christmas cake that hid the only reliable curr ency at the time - g o ld sovereigns.
      Unfortunately, Jacko’s aunts were also keen to help their nephew’s wa r e f fort. In which case several cakes arrived for Jacko courtesy o f his do t ing aunties. The mass of cakes camouflaged the true identit y of the “r i chest cake”. Austin was called on and together they hack ed up several C h ristmas cakes until they struck gold.
      The war ended in August 1944 and Austin was posted home. He wrote of o n e o f his last experiences - it happened as he was getting ready t o retu rn t o New Zealand. “ I’d finished for the day, was packing u p to gohome a n d watching the Liberators coming in to land, at night . Thoughtthat blo k e’s low! He was, the next second , CRASH and flame s. So intomy little u t e, tore up the road about a quarter mile, ra n across a paddock and hel p ed pull one guy away from the burning wre ck. He’d hit something, had n o r oof to his mouth and of course no te eth. And boy, washe hot. The amb ul ance arrived, popped him in an d I sat on his tummy all the way to hos p ital trying to dig his teet h out of his throat everytime he choked. Of t en wonder what happene d to him. Poor devil.”
      The next day Austin left for home. He returned via Morocco to Britain , o n t o the Queen Mary, which shipped him to New York where he remai ned fo r s ix weeks before training across America to San Francisco, t henon a b oa t to Noumea before reaching New Zealand.
      John Austin-Smith left his home town at the age of 19. He travelled th e w o rld and experienced the highs and lows of war, and the comradesh ips th a t were made and lost. He said the memories he made lived in h im foreve r : “They are events I will never forget and experiences an d friendships o n ly war can provide”. He returned home a humble, deco rated hero. As a w a rtime pilot he amassed a total of 1715 flying hou rs. John Austin-Smith p a ssed away last month aged 83.
      Weekly Feature - 1 November 2003
      A remarkable story finally shared with family
      The death of John Austin-Smith, of Masterton, has brought to life th e p a st of a humble but quite extraordinary man. JOSEPH WALLACE spok e with h i s family and discovered the exceptional story of a wartim e hero. A sto r y filled with humour, intrigue, action and history.
      DURING World War II, in September 1943, the Allied Navy captured the i s l and of Cos in the Aegean Sea. Not long after this success, pilot J ohn A u stin Henry Smith and the crew of squadron 267 delivered import ant back - up equipment and supplies to the battle-weary navy.
      The squadron loaded their DC3s and left the Ramat David airport in Isr a e l, heading for the small island just off the southwest coast of Tu rkey . T he four unarmed supply planes slipped undetected through Turk ey’s ne ut ral south coast before Austin and his squadron landed succe ssfully at C o s airstrip. The four planes spread out over the aerodro me and unloaded t h e naval provisions. Austin finished and returned t o his cabin to prepa r e for the departing flight. He settled into th e cockpit and attempted t o s tart the motors. They refused to turn. T he only other option was to m a nually crank the motors from outside t he aircraft. He returned to the t a rmac and began cranking. That’s wh en he heard five Luftwaffe ME109 fig h ters.
      The German fighters began a strafing run over the airstrip showering t h e i sland with enemy fire. Austin-Smith ran for cover, diving behin d a s ta ck of unidentified drums, soon discovering they were containe rs of fu e l.
      He escaped the petrol explosion, but the attack left three planes utte r l y annihilated. Two were aflame, the other was riddled with bullets . Se v eral men, who were most likely known to Austin, were killed. Hi s crew a n d the surviving crew of the destroyed planes picked their f riends bodi e s from the tarmac and retreated to the only plane intact .
      Austin quickly looked over his aircraft, checking for damage. He disco v e red the plane was hit. The left wing was shot through, resulting i n th e d amage of a foot-wide sheet of its structure. The German fight ers cou ld h ave returned at any time and Austin knew it was not saf e to linger. T h e lives of the remaining crews depended on the swif t departure of the s u rviving plane.
      He acted fast. Leaving the tarmac, Austin climbed on to the wing and r i p ped the shot piece away and discarded it. The aircraft was loade d and e n gines cranked. Austin piloted his wounded DC3 away from th e damaged ai r strip and away from the carcasses of the other three pl anes. Once Aust i n had flown out of immediate danger, he returned t o the cabin to check h i s passengers. They were fine, playing cards a nd using their fallen com r ades as seats to make the journey more com fortable. Austin later repli e d to this thought: “Such is the way o f warfare.”
      John Austin-Smith was known in Masterton for setting up Austins Pharma c y , which was situated in a building on a corner of Queen and Perr y stre e ts, now occupied by Sounds Music.
      To locals he was a nice guy who was a keen golfer known as Austin. Aus t i n’s obituary stated - “NZ402474 RNZAF. 90 Squadron, 267 Squadron . Spec i al OPS, ME Order of the Crown of Yugoslavia 1942, DFC 1943. ” An extrao r dinary history to be briefly mapped out in a small colum n of the paper .
      Inquiries led to a 30-page book.
      Apparently Austin never mentioned the war. Until, aged 82, he was conv i n ced by his family to tell his experience and put it on paper. Wha t eve n tuated was titled Memories of an Airman. J.A.H. Austin-Smith . In it wa s r ecorded the career of a wartime hero as he told it. A s traightforwar d a nd simple account of Austin-Smith’s recollection o f his time in Worl d W ar II.
      Austin grew up in Dannevirke. His family were poor and financially str e t ched through the Depression. His parents struggled to buy books an d un i forms for him to go to college. Money was in short supply and j obs sca r ce. Subsequently, when World War II broke out, it was an exc iting pros p ect for many young men, including a young Austin aged 19.
      He applied for the air force and managed to join by telling a few whit e l i es. Austin said he almost missed out on the air force altogethe r becau s e his urine test failed. He immediately called upon his heal thier brot h er to help out and sent a second sample. His brother pass ed this test a n d Austin was in turn accepted in July 1940.
      Over the next eight months he trained throughout New Zealand before h e a n d his friends were shipped away to Canada aboard SS Awatea. Aust in des c ribed the Awatea journey as “the life of luxury” where he wou ld enjoy “ f ive or six-course meals”. He liked it so much he said h e thought: “Wow , i f this is war, wiz oh, I’m all for it”. Over the n ext few months Aus ti n trained in Canada before he once again departe d, this time for Engl a nd. In England he was prepared as a pilot of t he RAF.
      Austin continued training and was assigned to the new Liberator conver s i on unit, which was to be sent on a special operations job in the M iddl e E ast. He spent only five hours training in the Liberators befo re he a nd h is crew were sent on a long flight to a new base in Fayid . At the t ime , Greece and Yugoslavia lacked communications, the Alli es had no met eo rological or navigational information from the groun d in these countr i es, making flights over this airspace extremely da ngerous.
      Austin and his squadron’s mission was to fly the two Liberators into t h e se fragile conditions dropping wireless operators, saboteurs and s uppl i es to the partisans who lived in the mountains of German-occupi ed Gree c e and Yugoslavia. It was a difficult ask as Liberators wer e 50-ton sup p ly planes only lightly armed and requiring a lot of pet rol for the lon g f lights from Fayid to Yugoslavia and back. They ha d to pack as much e qu ipment and men on each flight as possible. Cons equently the planes we r e stripped of non-essential weight - 95 perce nt of the ammunition was d i scarded, leaving only 100 rounds in the r ear gun turret. Austin said: “ W e were flying all night over enemy te rritory in aircraft that were lit e rally defenceless. It was a cat-an d-mouse operation.”
      The Liberator crews had to be elusive and get out of enemy territory b y d a ybreak or they were prime targets. But the enemy wasn’t the onl y dange r . One particular night Austin flew into cloud that was ful l of “severe i c ing” over the Aegean Sea. The Liberator’s instrument s immediately froz e a nd he became disorientated in the thick cloud . He was unaware of his a l titude and unsure if he was going straigh t or off course. Although the a u topilot was on, Austin said his inst inct was to take the stick and alt e r its level. But this action coul d be deadly. Instead, Austin refused t h e itch to grab the controls a nd stood up from his seat to feel the sit u ation. Everything felt nor mal, so he waited it out while de-icing heat e rs kicked in. It remain ed this way for some minutes for what must have b e en an eternity. Ev entually the instruments came back after an intensel y -nervous wait f or Austin in his blind, drifting aircraft.
      Despite numerous dangers including the weather, anti-aircraft ground f i r e and enemy fighters, Austin wrote: “The thing that caused us th e most c o ncern was a bloody star! Venus!”. It was often mistaken fo r an enemy p l ane. Austin said he knew of some gunners shooting of f a few precaution a ry rounds at the planet, just in case.
      Eventually, after numerous trips, wireless communication enabled the L i b erators to receive weather forecasts and news of the success of th eir d r ops. The flights were known to be some of the most arduous fli ghts und e r extremely difficult conditions. Austin finished these ope rations wit h 4 46 hours of flying. He flew 19 trips to Yugoslavia an d 13 drops into G r eece.
      In recognition for the flights into Yugoslavia Austin was awarded th e O r der of the Crown of Yugoslavia on October 20, 1942. This was fol lowed w i th one of the highest honours awarded to pilots, the Disting uished Fly i ng Cross.
      Austin and his crew were taken off transport duty in October 1943. Th e o d ds must have been in his favour as he was still alive after thi s exten s ive period - of the 56 men he trained with during the earl y stage of t h e war in Canada, only 15 returned home. Perhaps a littl e luck was on h i s side. “Fate played strange tricks in those weird d ays,” he said.
      Austin was assigned to instructing other pilots how to fly large trans p o rt planes. During the course of one morning Austin finished up ins truc t ing another pilot in a Liberator. He finished the lesson and la nded fo r b reakfast. His good friend, Squadron Leader Rolph-Smith, to ok over th e j ob and took the Liberator up for another lesson. Durin g the plane’s f i rst circuit it struck a Hurricane that was coming in to land, it sliced o f f the Liberator’s tail. “All were killed instan tly.” Austin returned t o f ind he was promoted to squadron leader.
      Despite the war and all the experiences that came with it, Austin’s Me m o ries are filled with amusing moments. One is when his good frien d thro u ghout the war, Jacko Madill, sent Christmas correspondence t o his fath e r expressing that he was in need of money. His father rep lied by sendi n g him a Christmas cake that hid the only reliable curr ency at the time - g o ld sovereigns.
      Unfortunately, Jacko’s aunts were also keen to help their nephew’s wa r e f fort. In which case several cakes arrived for Jacko courtesy o f his do t ing aunties. The mass of cakes camouflaged the true identit y of the “r i chest cake”. Austin was called on and together they hack ed up several C h ristmas cakes until they struck gold.
      The war ended in August 1944 and Austin was posted home. He wrote of o n e o f his last experiences - it happened as he was getting ready t o retu rn t o New Zealand. “ I’d finished for the day, was packing u p to go hom e a nd watching the Liberators coming in to land, at night . Thought that b l oke’s low! He was, the next second , CRASH and flam es. So into my litt l e ute, tore up the road about a quarter mile, ra n across a paddock and h e lped pull one guy away from the burning wre ck. He’d hit something, had n o r oof to his mouth and of course no te eth. And boy, was he hot. The am bu lance arrived, popped him in an d I sat on his tummy all the way to ho s pital trying to dig his teet h out of his throat every time he choked. O f ten wonder what happene d to him. Poor devil.”
      The next day Austin left for home. He returned via Morocco to Britain , o n t o the Queen Mary, which shipped him to New York where he remai ned fo r s ix weeks before training across America to San Francisco, t hen on a b o at to Noumea before reaching New Zealand.
      John Austin-Smith left his home town at the age of 19. He travelled th e w o rld and experienced the highs and lows of war, and the comradesh ips th a t were made and lost. He said the memories he made lived in h im foreve r : “They are events I will never forget and experiences an d friendships o n ly war can provide”. He returned home a humble, deco rated hero. As a w a rtime pilot he amassed a total of 1715 flying hou rs. John Austin-Smith p a ssed away last month aged 83.

      -- MERGED NOTE ------------

      Weekly Feature - 1 November 2003
      A remarkable story finally shared with family
      The death of John Austin-Smith, of Masterton, has brought to life thep a s t of a humble but quite extraordinary man. JOSEPH WALLACE spoke wi th h i s family and discovered the exceptional story of a wartime hero .A stor y f illed with humour, intrigue, action and history.
      DURING World War II, in September 1943, the Allied Navy captured the i s l and of Cos in the Aegean Sea. Not long after this success, pilot J ohn A u stin Henry Smith and the crew of squadron 267 delivered import antback- u p equipment and supplies to the battle-weary navy.
      The squadron loaded their DC3s and left the Ramat David airport in Isr a e l, heading for the small island just off the southwest coast of Tu rkey . T he four unarmed supply planes slipped undetected through Turk ey’s ne ut ral south coast before Austin and his squadron landed succe ssfully at C o s airstrip. The four planes spread out over the aerodro me andunloaded t h e naval provisions. Austin finished and returned t o his cabin to prepa r e for the departing flight. He settled into th e cockpit and attempted t o s tart the motors. They refused to turn. T he only otheroption was to m an ually crank the motors from outside th e aircraft. Hereturned to the t a rmac and began cranking. That’s whe n he heard five Luftwaffe ME109 fig h ters.
      The German fighters began a strafing run over the airstrip showering t h e i sland with enemy fire. Austin-Smith ran for cover, diving behind a st ac k of unidentified drums, soon discovering they were container s of fue l .
      He escaped the petrol explosion, but the attack left three planes utte r l y annihilated. Two were aflame, the other was riddled with bullets .Sev e ral men, who were most likely known to Austin, were killed. Hi s crew a n d the surviving crew of the destroyed planes picked their f riends bodi e s from the tarmac and retreated to the only plane intact .
      Austin quickly looked over his aircraft, checking for damage. He disco v e red the plane was hit. The left wing was shot through, resulting i nthe d a mage of a foot-wide sheet of its structure. The German fighte rscould h a ve returned at any time and Austin knew it was not safe t o linger. The l i ves of the remaining crews depended on the swift dep artureof the survi v ing plane.
      He acted fast. Leaving the tarmac, Austin climbed on to the wing and r i p ped the shot piece away and discarded it. The aircraft was loade d and e n gines cranked. Austin piloted his wounded DC3 away from th e damaged ai r strip and away from the carcasses of the other three pl anes. Once Aust i n had flown out of immediate danger, he returned t o the cabin to check h i s passengers. They were fine, playing cards a nd using theirfallen comr a des as seats to make the journey more comf ortable. Austinlater replied t o t his thought: “Such is the way of wa rfare.”
      John Austin-Smith was known in Masterton for setting up Austins Pharma c y , which was situated in a building on a corner of Queen and Perr y stre e ts, now occupied by Sounds Music.
      To locals he was a nice guy who was a keen golfer known as Austin. Aus t i n’s obituary stated - “NZ402474 RNZAF. 90 Squadron, 267 Squadron . Spec i al OPS, ME Order of the Crown of Yugoslavia 1942, DFC 1943. ” An extrao r dinary history to be briefly mapped out in a small colum n of the paper .
      Inquiries led to a 30-page book.
      Apparently Austin never mentioned the war. Until, aged 82, he was conv i n ced by his family to tell his experience and put it on paper. Wha t eve n tuated was titled Memories of an Airman. J.A.H. Austin-Smith . In it wa s r ecorded the career of a wartime hero as he told it. A s traightforwar d a nd simple account of Austin-Smith’s recollection o f his time in Worl d W ar II.
      Austin grew up in Dannevirke. His family were poor and financially str e t ched through the Depression. His parents struggled to buy books an duni f orms for him to go to college. Money was in short supply and jo bsscarc e . Subsequently, when World War II broke out, it was an excit ingprospec t f or many young men, including a young Austin aged 19.
      He applied for the air force and managed to join by telling a few whit e l i es. Austin said he almost missed out on the air force altogethe r becau s e his urine test failed. He immediately called upon his heal thier brot h er to help out and sent a second sample. His brother pass ed this test a n d Austin was in turn accepted in July 1940.
      Over the next eight months he trained throughout New Zealand before h e a n d his friends were shipped away to Canada aboard SS Awatea. Aust in des c ribed the Awatea journey as “the life of luxury” where he wou ldenjoy “ f ive or six-course meals”. He liked it so much he said he t hought: “Wow , i f this is war, wiz oh, I’m all for it”. Over the nex t few months Aus ti n trained in Canada before he once again departed , this time for Engl a nd. In England he was prepared as a pilot of th e RAF.
      Austin continued training and was assigned to the new Liberator conver s i on unit, which was to be sent on a special operations job in the M iddl e E ast. He spent only five hours training in the Liberators befo re he a nd h is crew were sent on a long flight to a new base in Fayid . At the t ime , Greece and Yugoslavia lacked communications, the Alli es had no met eo rological or navigational information from the groun d in thesecountri e s, making flights over this airspace extremely dan gerous.
      Austin and his squadron’s mission was to fly the two Liberators into t h e se fragile conditions dropping wireless operators, saboteurs and s uppl i es to the partisans who lived in the mountains of German-occupi ed Gree c e and Yugoslavia. It was a difficult ask as Liberators wer e 50-ton sup p ly planes only lightly armed and requiring a lot of pet rol for the lon g f lights from Fayid to Yugoslavia and back. They ha d to pack as much e qu ipment and men on each flight as possible. Cons equently theplanes wer e s tripped of non-essential weight - 95 percen t of the ammunition was d is carded, leaving only 100 rounds in the re ar gun turret. Austin said: “ W e were flying all night over enemy ter ritory in aircraft that were lit e rally defenceless. It was a cat-and -mouse operation.”
      The Liberator crews had to be elusive and get out of enemy territory b y d a ybreak or they were prime targets. But the enemy wasn’t the onl y dange r . One particular night Austin flew into cloud that was ful l of “severe i c ing” over the Aegean Sea. The Liberator’s instrument s immediately froz e a nd he became disorientated in the thick cloud . He was unaware of his a l titude and unsure if he was going straigh t or off course.Although the a u topilot was on, Austin said his insti nct was to take the stick and alt e r its level. But this action coul d be deadly. Instead, Austin refused t h e itch to grab the controls a nd stood up from his seat to feel the sit u ation. Everything felt nor mal, so he waited it out while de-icing heat e rs kicked in. It remain ed this way for some minutes for what must have b e en an eternity. Ev entually the instruments came back after an intensel y -nervous wait f or Austin in his blind, drifting aircraft.
      Despite numerous dangers including the weather, anti-aircraft ground f i r e and enemy fighters, Austin wrote: “The thing that caused us th e most c o ncern was a bloody star! Venus!”. It was often mistaken fo r an enemy p l ane. Austin said he knew of some gunners shooting of f a few precaution a ry rounds at the planet, just in case.
      Eventually, after numerous trips, wireless communication enabled the L i b erators to receive weather forecasts and news of the success of th eir d r ops. The flights were known to be some of the most arduous fli ghts und e r extremely difficult conditions. Austin finished these ope rations wit h 4 46 hours of flying. He flew 19 trips to Yugoslavia an d 13 drops into G r eece.
      In recognition for the flights into Yugoslavia Austin was awarded theO r d er of the Crown of Yugoslavia on October 20, 1942. This was follow ed w i th one of the highest honours awarded to pilots, the Distinguis hed Fly i ng Cross.
      Austin and his crew were taken off transport duty in October 1943. Th e o d ds must have been in his favour as he was still alive after thi s exten s ive period - of the 56 men he trained with during the earl y stage of t h e war in Canada, only 15 returned home. Perhaps a littl e luck was on h i s side. “Fate played strange tricks in those weird d ays,” he said.
      Austin was assigned to instructing other pilots how to fly large trans p o rt planes. During the course of one morning Austin finished up ins truc t ing another pilot in a Liberator. He finished the lesson and la nded fo r b reakfast. His good friend, Squadron Leader Rolph-Smith, to ok over th e j ob and took the Liberator up for another lesson. Durin g the plane’s f i rst circuit it struck a Hurricane that was coming in to land, it sliced o f f the Liberator’s tail. “All were killed instan tly.” Austin returned t o f ind he was promoted to squadron leader.
      Despite the war and all the experiences that came with it, Austin’s Me m o ries are filled with amusing moments. One is when his good frien d thro u ghout the war, Jacko Madill, sent Christmas correspondence t o his fath e r expressing that he was in need of money. His father rep lied by sendi n g him a Christmas cake that hid the only reliable curr ency at the time - g o ld sovereigns.
      Unfortunately, Jacko’s aunts were also keen to help their nephew’s wa r e f fort. In which case several cakes arrived for Jacko courtesy o f his do t ing aunties. The mass of cakes camouflaged the true identit y of the “r i chest cake”. Austin was called on and together they hack ed up several C h ristmas cakes until they struck gold.
      The war ended in August 1944 and Austin was posted home. He wrote of o n e o f his last experiences - it happened as he was getting ready t o retu rn t o New Zealand. “ I’d finished for the day, was packing u p to gohome a n d watching the Liberators coming in to land, at night . Thoughtthat blo k e’s low! He was, the next second , CRASH and flame s. So intomy little u t e, tore up the road about a quarter mile, ra n across a paddock and hel p ed pull one guy away from the burning wre ck. He’d hit something, had n o r oof to his mouth and of course no te eth. And boy, washe hot. The amb ul ance arrived, popped him in an d I sat on his tummy all the way to hos p ital trying to dig his teet h out of his throat everytime he choked. Of t en wonder what happene d to him. Poor devil.”
      The next day Austin left for home. He returned via Morocco to Britain , o n t o the Queen Mary, which shipped him to New York where he remai ned fo r s ix weeks before training across America to San Francisco, t henon a b oa t to Noumea before reaching New Zealand.
      John Austin-Smith left his home town at the age of 19. He travelled th e w o rld and experienced the highs and lows of war, and the comradesh ips th a t were made and lost. He said the memories he made lived in h im foreve r : “They are events I will never forget and experiences an d friendships o n ly war can provide”. He returned home a humble, deco rated hero. As a w a rtime pilot he amassed a total of 1715 flying hou rs. John Austin-Smith p a ssed away last month aged 83.
      TEXT: _WEBTAG
      NAME WebTag
      URL http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=93427436

  • Sources 
    1. [S34] Unkn own, Descandants of Henry and Mary-Ann Smith , Hawkes Bay, New Ze a land (Name: Document Compiled by unknown Ancestor;), Descandants of Henry and Mary-Ann Smith , Hawkes Bay, New Zealand (Written out in hand on sheets of papar). (Reliability: 0).

    2. [S54] FIndagrave.com, Find A Grave Memorial# 93427436 John Austin Henry SMith and Dorothy Carroll (Reliability: 0).
      Birth: Apr., 1920
      Death: Oct. 11, 2003, New Zealand

      John Austin Henry AUSTIN married Carroll SMITH in 1946

      Family links:
      Spouse:
      Carroll Smith Austin-Smith (1922 - 2012)

      Inscription:
      J Austin H AUSTIN-SMITH
      DFC ORD Crown Yugoslavia
      402474 1939-45 Sqn Ldr
      108 Sqn 159 Sqn 160 Sqn
      Died 11.10.2003, Aged 83 yrs
      Carroll AUSTIN-SMITH
      Died 29.12.2010, Aged 88 yrs

      Burial:
      Riverside Cemetery
      Masterton
      Wellington, New Zealand
      Plot: Q, Row 2, Ex Servicemen
      GPS (lat/lon): -40.96218, 175.67259

      Created by: JoGregory
      Record added: Jul 11, 2012

    3. [S22] Archives NZ, Archived Military Service Records for William Alfred Smith (Reliability: 0).



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