“Corporal Bill Bloys, 2 Para” (1 Viewer)

King & Country

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Hi Guys,

Both Mike Neville of K&C UK and myself have been in contact with Corporal Bloys’ family over the last couple of weeks and I thought you might be interested in me passing on the comments of Bill Bloys’ son lan on our figure of his Dad...

“I was amazed how much the K&C figure looked like my father! However one small correction...my Dad was not Colonel Frost’s batman he was, in fact, his close protection during the battle.”

Sadly Bill passed away earlier this year in February at the grand old age of 90! Yet another of our WW2 veterans gone to join his comrades-in-arms.

Here at K&C we thank lan for his kind and appreciative words and for his father’s service...These guys truly were a gallant breed.

Best wishes and happy collecting!

Andy C.​
 
Thanks for sharing this story with us Andy. It's a nice touch naming some of your figures of the MG range and I'm sure one of the reasons the series is so popular. Please don't stop adding to this range anytime soon.:salute::
Cheers Toddy
 
Especially today, in the world of today we need more such men !!!!!
guy:)
 
I found this from The Daily Telegraph..................

Final leap to honor Arnhem’s fallen

For his family it was the most fitting way to lay him to rest, allowing him “one last jump” in the process.

On Saturday Cpl William Bloys’s ashes were scattered over the Dutch heathland on which he landed 70 years ago, as he took part in what became one of history’s best-known airborne assaults.

His remains were dispersed by one of around 200 British paratroopers jumping onto the fields near Arnhem used by troops taking part in Operation Market Garden in September 1944. Cpl Bloys, who lied about his age to join the Essex Regiment at the age of 16, served with the 2nd Battalion Parachute Regiment during the operation.

His was the only battalion that succeeded in reaching the road bridge at Arnhem, which they had been ordered to capture to allow Allied troops to cross the Rhine. The battalion was led by Lt Col John Frost, whose character was played by Anthony Hopkins in the Richard Attenborough film A Bridge Too Far, which was based on the battle. However, having been unable to defend the bridge, Cpl Bloys was among many paratroopers captured by the SS and taken to a prisoner of war camp in Germany.

He managed to escape but was captured once again. He then managed to escape for a second time with another soldier and the pair stole a car in which they managed to make it to American lines.

He last visited Arnhem in 2004 with his wife Doreen, who died six years later. Before his own death in February he described how the horrors of the fighting at Arnhem were still “fresh in my mind”. “You can never really get it across to people about the horrors of battle. You are speaking to people one minute and then two minutes afterwards their life is finished. It was a terrible battle and was not well planned.”

On Saturday dozens of veterans of the assault, most of them in their nineties and either wheelchair bound or walking with the aid of sticks, watched as around 500 Allied troops jumped out of planes to commemorate the seven-decade anniversary of the Second World War operation. Cpl Bloys was one of a number of veterans whose ashes were scattered by British paratroopers landing on Ginkel Heath, in a show of respect and camaraderie towards their predecessors.

This weekend his daughter-in-law Rita, who watched the jump with her husband Ian, among a crowd of around 40,000 people said the gesture was first suggested by a paratrooper who attended Cpl Bloys’s funeral in March. Cpl Bloys had died a month earlier aged 90. Mrs Bloys, 65, said: “It is just an unofficial thing that they offered to do for us. My father-in-law was very fond of the area. In his later years he said he felt that the fighting had destroyed the area, but he came back here often.

“We just thought it would be fitting to leave a bit of him here. It seems like the final thing we can do for him. We are very emotional.”
Mr Bloys, 66, a former electrician for Ford from Hornchurch in Essex, said before the jump: “He never expressed a wish for what he wanted done with his ashes. But especially in the early days he used to come back here. The last time was on the sixtieth anniversary in 2004. He appreciated the way the Dutch people treated him. He was there for a few days and all the young children were asking for his autograph. It was like being a movie star.

“He was in North Africa, Sicily, Italy and then Arnhem but Arnhem was the one he mentioned the most. “We want to do the right thing by him. This will be his last jump - I think he would appreciate that.” Operation Market Garden saw more than 40,000 British, US, Canadian and Polish troops dropped behind the German lines at Arnhem in September 1944.
 
Good evening gentlemen.

As a Staffordshire boy I would like to put forward the suggestion for a figure of Lance Sergeant JD Baskeyfield VC. He was a native of the five towns that make up the city of Stoke on Trent. Although he may not have had the impact on the out come of the war as RJ Mitchell that other Famous son had; he was non the less a brave man who would pay the ultimate price


There is a very good statue depicting Lance Sergeant Baskeyfield holding an artillery round in the city but unfortunately I have not been able to attach an image.


"While defending the Oosterbeek perimeter three days into the battle, Baskeyfield commanded a pair of anti tank guns that destroyed several enemy tanks before the crews were killed. Baskeyfield subsequently fired the guns alone before he too was killed. His body was not identified after the war and he has no known grave"

Just a suggestion, this operation was marked by many acts of bravery and I can not claim that he was any more heroic than any other man.

Regards to all

Glynn
 
Good evening gentlemen.

As a Staffordshire boy I would like to put forward the suggestion for a figure of Lance Sergeant JD Baskeyfield VC. He was a native of the five towns that make up the city of Stoke on Trent. Although he may not have had the impact on the out come of the war as RJ Mitchell that other Famous son had; he was non the less a brave man who would pay the ultimate price


There is a very good statue depicting Lance Sergeant Baskeyfield holding an artillery round in the city but unfortunately I have not been able to attach an image.


"While defending the Oosterbeek perimeter three days into the battle, Baskeyfield commanded a pair of anti tank guns that destroyed several enemy tanks before the crews were killed. Baskeyfield subsequently fired the guns alone before he too was killed. His body was not identified after the war and he has no known grave"

Just a suggestion, this operation was marked by many acts of bravery and I can not claim that he was any more heroic than any other man.

Regards to all

Glynn

Here you go Glynn - is this the Staue of this very gallant soldier? ( with thanks to Wiki). jb.

 
Having Metal, hand painted Toy soldiers made of these hero's is a very fitting tribute to these men. To me this was hands down a great idea
from the start !
 
Here you go Glynn - is this the Staue of this very gallant soldier? ( with thanks to Wiki). jb.


Thanks Johnnybach

This is indeed the statue. For some reason my PC scrambled my copy of the photo. The statue is much more impressive when seen in the flesh so to speak.

Regards

RAMC
 

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