Alexander Joseph Smith
1921-1944
Oorlogsslachtoffer
Is 22 jaar geworden
Geboren op 09-05-1921 in Meester Cornelis, NOI
Overleden op 15-03-1944 in Stretton, Cheshire a/b Hellcat JV166
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The Flag of the Netherlands on St. Cross Church, Appleton, Thorn (May 2020)
In the Netherlands, the Remembrance of the Dead (Dodenherdening) is held annually on 4 May, the eve of the anniversary the liberation of the Netherlands from the Nazi occupation of 1940 to 1945. It now commemorates all civilians and members of the armed forces of the Kingdom of the Netherlands who have died in wars or peacekeeping
missions since the beginning of the Second World War.[1]
In the churchyard at St Cross, Appleton Thorn, are buried two Dutch airmen, flying officer (Officier-vlieger) Petrus Johannes HUIJER and Sergeant Aviator (Sergeant Vlieger) Alexander Joseph SMITH[2]. They were young Free Dutch[3]Â Naval Officers serving in the Fleet Air Arm, who trained at HMS Blackcap. They were killed when their planes collided over Budworth Mereon 15 March 1944[4], whilst practicing for the D Day Landings[5].
HMS Blackcap, or the Royal Naval Air Station, Stretton, was originally planned as a Royal Air Force night-fighter station to protect Liverpool and Manchester from Luftwaffe
air raids during the Second World War. But changes in German tactics (to focus attention on Russia) meant that the airfield was not required,so it was transferred to the Admiralty on completion.
HMS Blackcap was commissioned on 1 June 1942 and forty-one Fleet Air Arm Squadrons were based there for varying periods, some aircraft being flown directly to and from aircraft carriers operating in the Irish Sea and other nearby waters.[6]
After the war, HMS Blackcap was home to the Fleet Air Arm’s Northern Air Division. The last operational Squadron based at Blackcap was 728B Squadron (FAA) who were formed in January  1958 and flew out of Blackcap on the 15th February 1958 en route to RNAS Hal Far, Malta.
HMS Blackcap was decommissioned on the 4th November 1958[7].
As well as the two Dutch Airmen, we also remember Paul Bosman. Paul, originally from Leeuwarden in the Netherlands, spotted the distinctive Dutch war graves at St Cross and
asked if the church could hold an act of remembrance on 4 May. He and his son, David, adopted the two graves in 2013 – a custom in the Netherlands. Sadly, Paul died in 2019. His son, David, has asked us to continue the act of remembrance, which we are happy to do, and to remember Paul, and pray for his wife, Lyndy, and David.
Geplaatst door Grace Smith op 22 maart 2026



