- RCAF Trenton during the Second World War -
Airfields Index
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site you agree to accept cookies.
If you enjoy this siteplease consider making a donation.
Site Home
WW2 Home
Add Stories
WW2 Search
Library
Help & FAQs
WW2 Features
Airfields
Allied Army
Allied Air Forces
Allied Navy
Axis Forces
Home Front
Battles
Prisoners of War
Allied Ships
Women at War
Those Who Served
Day-by-Day
Library
The Great War
Submissions
Add Stories
Time Capsule
Childrens Bookshop
FAQ's
Help & FAQs
Glossary
Volunteering
Contact us
News
Bookshop
About
RCAF Trenton
If you can provide any additional information, please add it here.
Those known to have served at
RCAF Trenton
during the Second World War 1939-1945.
- Carswell John McKinley. F/O.
- Villinger George Kooker. Sgt.Pilot. (d.2nd March 1944)
- Walton Charles Henry. Sgt. (d.23rd Jan 1944)
The names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List
The Wartime Memories Project is the original WW1 and WW2 commemoration website.
Announcements
- 1st of September 2024 marks 25 years since the launch of the Wartime Memories Project. Thanks to everyone who has supported us over this time.
- The Wartime Memories Project has been running for 25 years. If you would like to support us, a donation, no matter how small, would be much appreciated, annually we need to raise enough funds to pay for our web hosting and admin or this site will vanish from the web.
- 19th Nov 2024 - Please note we currently have a huge backlog of submitted material, our volunteers are working through this as quickly as possible and all names, stories and photos will be added to the site. If you have already submitted a story to the site and your UID reference number is higher than 264989 your information is still in the queue, please do not resubmit, we are working through them as quickly as possible.
- Looking for help with Family History Research? Please read our Family History FAQs
- The free to access section of The Wartime Memories Project website is run by volunteers and funded by donations from our visitors. If the information here has been helpful or you have enjoyed reaching the stories please conside making a donation, no matter how small, would be much appreciated, annually we need to raise enough funds to pay for our web hosting or this site will vanish from the web.
If you enjoy this siteplease consider making a donation.
Want to find out more about your relative's service? Want to know what life was like during the War? Our Library contains an ever growing number diary entries, personal letters and other documents, most transcribed into plain text.
Wanted: Digital copies of Group photographs, Scrapbooks, Autograph books, photo albums, newspaper clippings, letters, postcards and ephemera relating to WW2. We would like to obtain digital copies of any documents or photographs relating to WW2 you may have at home.If you have any unwanted photographs, documents or items from the First or Second World War, please do not destroy them. The Wartime Memories Project will give them a good home and ensure that they are used for educational purposes.
Please get in touch for the postal address, do not sent them to our PO Box as packages are not accepted. World War 1 One ww1 wwII second 1939 1945 battalion
Did you know? We also have a section on The Great War. and a Timecapsule to preserve stories from other conflicts for future generations.
Want to know more about RCAF Trenton?
There are:-1 items tagged RCAF Trenton available in our Library
These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Second World War.
F/O. John McKinley Carswell
John Carswell came to RAF Hatfield as a under-training pilot in NO.1 EFTS (Early Flying Training School). Pre-war, he was training to become a chartered accountant and joined the Non Permanent Active Militia in Montreal, Canada, ten days before war was declared. A motorcycle dispatch rider in the NPAM, he was mobilized into the Canadian Army Signals Corps, trained to drive a 5 CWT right-hand drive truck and after 4 months of bootcamp at Barryfield near Kingston, Ontario, he was sent overseas to the UK as part of the (CASF) Canadian Armed Service Force's first contingent scheduled for fighting in Europe. Then Dunkirk happened and 336,000 soldiers returned to Britain and the Canadians found themselves stuck with special duties in the UK for most of the war with one exception when a failed attack in 1942 killed a great many of them.Having originally applied to the RCAF in Canada, John Carswell found they were not equipped to train the large number of applicants at that point. He would not end up in the air force until he was posted to the UK. It was at No.1 EFTS (Early Flying Training School) at RAF Hatfield that John Carswell met Geoff De Havilland then testing the new Mosquito in secrecy. It was here that John Carswell also met his first German spy trying to find information about this new aircraft.
John had befriended a corporal in the library and once he earned his wings, he asked him if he knew a good photographer in London. The corporal did, offered to get the address and make the appointment for him. It turned out that the photographer was the Photographer to the Royal Family, and later a 3-time Academy Award winner. It seems the Corporal was a member of the extended Royal family doing his war service as the station librarian at RAF Hatfield. Once he was told he had earned his wings, his instructor gave him permission to fly back to the airbase in his favourite position. For the next 5 miles they flew upside down. John McKinley Carswell earned his commission as a pilot officer, went on through the war to the rank of Flight Lieutenant. He became a training pilot, a flight commander, ran a parachute folding operation, became a 2nd Class Navigator (only 7 became first class), a navigations instructor and was assigned to the Navigator selection board in Harrogate Yorkshire. Married at this point to the senior WAAF officer at RAF Wigtown, Pat Leonard, they were separated by the war for many months. Married and Pregnant after almost 3 years of service, at RAF Biggin Hill fighter station and RAF Wigtown, she would leave the WAAF to become a mother and housewife in Harrogate. Just after their marriage on 27th of August 1942, John Carswell flew as co-pilot on a Lancaster Bomber seeing action over Germany and Poland. Returning to Harrogate, he was appointed to the Pilot Training Board where he would remain until he left to return to Canada in June 1944. A member of the RCAF in April, 1944, Flight Lieutenant John McKinley Carswell late of the RAF, was retested and grounded for the duration of the war, which meant he could not return to his family. After training at RCAF Trenton, he was appointed station adjutant of No. 10 EFTS at Pendleton, Ontario. He would serve out the war there as senior officer of the station, his wife and two children from the UK having joined him in March, 1945 after a split of almost nine months.
Returning to Montreal after WWII he became a corporate secretary and director of nine companies before his early retirement at age 54 to a lake property north of Kingston, Ontario. His wife, the former plotter, cipher officer and subsequently senior WAAF officer at RAF Wigtown and survivor of the Battle of Britain at RAF Biggin Hill Fighter station, arrived in Canada as a Canadian War Bride with two Canadian War Babies. "Paddy" Leonard Carswell as she was nicknamed, would have two more children in Canada and live to the ripe old age of 85 passing away at Dog Lake, off Burnt Hills Road, RR3 Seeley's Bay, Ontario in 2005. John McKinley Carswell who was virtually blind by then, spent the next two years in a special needs home in Kingston, Ontario where he died in 2007 at the age of 88. His unique war record, like hers, was matched by few and yet they survived well into their mid to late 80's. Their ashes were scattered on Dog Lake, beside their beloved retirement home of thirty years. RIP
Bob Casrwell
Sgt.Pilot. George Kooker Villinger 175 Squadron (d.2nd March 1944)
George Villinger, age 23, from Palmyra, New Jersey, voluntarily enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force at Montreal, Quebec on 20th of October 1941. After basic training/guard duty and Initial Training School at Toronto, Trenton, London and Belleville (all in the Province of Ontario), George began flight training on de Havilland Tiger Moth biplanes at RCAF No. 20 Elementary Flying Training School at Oshawa, Ontario. From there, he was posted to RCAF No. 16 Service Flying Training School at Hagersville, Ontario where he flew twin-engined Avro Ansons. He graduated as a Sergeant Pilot earning his wings on 25th of September 1942. George shipped out to England from Halifax, Nova Scotia in early October that year.On 24th of November 1942 he commenced fighter pilot training on Hawker Hurricanes at Royal Air Force (RAF) No. 55 Operational Training Unit and was then posted to 175 , RFAon 26th of January 1943 where he flew Hurricanes until 24th of March 1943 when he transferred from the RCAF to the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF). George died 2nd of March 1944.
Sgt. Charles Henry Walton 161 Squadron (d.23rd Jan 1944)
His RAF ID card states Henry Walton was stationed at RCAF Station Trenton, Ontario, Canada in 1942. The Commonwealth War Graves records state Henry was in 161 Squadron, he died on 23rd of January 1944., and commemorated at the Runnymede Memorial at Englefield Green, Surrey. Henry's name is also on the Thorpe-le-Soken war memorial.Nick Sheen
Recomended Reading.
Available at discounted prices.
Links
The free section of the Wartime Memories Project website is run by volunteers. We have been helping people find out more about their relatives wartime experiences since 1999 by recording and preserving recollections, documents, photographs and small items.
The website is paid for out of our own pockets, library subscriptions and from donations made by visitors. The popularity of the site means that it is far exceeding available resources and we currently have a huge backlog of submissions.
If you are enjoying the site, please consider making a donation, however small to help with the costs of keeping the site running.
Hosted by:
Copyright MCMXCIX - MMXXIV
- All Rights Reserved
We do not permit the use of any content from this website for the training of LLMs or for use in Generative AI, it also may not be scraped for the purpose of creating other websites.