Flight Lieutenant Arthur Charles Griffin (62311) served in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve during the Second World War. Born in 1916, he was the son of Charles Henry Griffin and Emma Griffin of Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, England.
Flight Lieutenant Griffin died on 22nd August 1943 aged 27 years old when the R.A.F. 201 Squadron Short Sunderland DD848 came down on Mount Brandon, Co. Kerry. The experienced crew had come together that summer flying under Flight Lieutenant Charles Seymour Grossey. At 0600hrs on the morning of 22nd August 1943, the crew was on the return leg of a reconnaissance flight over the Atlantic Ocean. Griffin was the 2nd Pilot of a crew of 11 men. Of those on board, 8 died as a result of the crash on the Dingle Peninsula in neutral Éire.
Remembering the crew of Sunderland DD848
Last Name | First Name(s) | Rank | Role | Information |
---|---|---|---|---|
Applegate | John Sidney | Sergeant | Flight Mechanic / Air Gunner | R.A.F. 647007. Survived. |
Burton | Joseph William | Flight Sergeant | Wireless Operator / Air Gunner | R.A.F.V.R. 1287499. Killed. |
Coster | John Robert | Flight Sergeant | Wireless Operator / Air Gunner | R.A.F.V.R. 1259732. Killed. Buried in Irvinestown. |
Davies | George William | Sergeant | Flight Engineer | R.A.F. 952226. Survived. |
Griffin | Arthur Charles | Flight Lieutenant | 2nd Pilot | R.A.F. 62311. Killed. Buried in Irvinestown. |
Grossey | Charles Seymour | Flight Lieutenant | 1st Pilot | R.A.F. 45199. Killed. Buried in Irvinestown. |
McLean | William | Flight Sergeant | Air Gunner | R.A.F.V.R. 996639. Distinguished Flying Medal. Survived. |
Pickford | Norman Baron | Flight Sergeant | Navigator | R.A.F. 657043. Killed. Buried in Irvinestown. |
Pitts | Walter Noel | Flight Sergeant | Flight Mechanic / Air Gunner | R.A.F. 749904. Killed. |
Tilt | George Frederick Walter | Sergeant | Wireless Operator / Air Gunner | R.A.F.V.R. 1338702. Killed. Buried in Irvinestown. |
Wilkinson | Guy Nelson | Flying Officer | 3rd Pilot | R.A.F. 51121. Killed. Buried in Irvinestown. |
A record card held at the R.A.F. Museum in Hendon, London, England holds the findings of the crash. In scrawled handwriting, it gives details of the disaster. Sunderland DD848 flew off-course too far south-east of its intended path. In darkness and low cloud, it crashed on the Irish hillside. The crash destroyed the Sunderland and as the incident occurred in neutral territory, there was no real investigation.
After the Crash
The crash of DD848 came less than a month after a British Overseas Airways Corporation Sunderland G-AGES crashed in the same range of hills. This incident made headline news while censorship and Ireland’s neutrality meant the story of DD848 remained almost unknown.
Flight Lieutenant Arthur Charles Griffin’s grave is in Plot 1, Grave 12 of Irvinestown Church of Ireland, Irvinestown, Co. Fermanagh. A memorial plaque to the men graces the wall of O’Connor’s Bar in Cloghane, Co. Kerry.