Ronald Bolton Littledale | |
---|---|
Nickname | Ronnie |
Born | 1902 Northwich, Cheshire |
Died | 1 September 1944 Airaines, Normandy |
Allegiance | British Empire |
Service/branch | British Army |
Years of service | 1922–1944 |
Rank | Lieutenant Colonel |
Unit | King's Royal Rifle Corps |
Commands held | 2nd Battalion King's Royal Rifle Corps |
Battles/wars | |
Awards | Distinguished Service Order |
Lieutenant Colonel Ronald 'Ronnie' Bolton Littledale DSO (KIA 1 September 1944), was a British Army officer who became a Prisoner of War and successfully escaped from Colditz Castle during the Second World War.
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Born summer 1902 in Northwich, Cheshire[1] the only son of Captain John Bolton Littledale and his wife, Clara Stevenson.[2]
He was educated at St. Aubyn's, Rotttingdean and then Eton.[3]
Littledale was trained at the Royal Military College and was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant on 1 February 1923.[4]
He served with the King's Royal Rifle Corps (KRRC) in the BAOR, India, Palestine and Northern Ireland,[3] rising through the ranks during the 1920s and 1930s
Littledale took part in the defence of Calais serving as a Major. On 26 May 1940 he was captured by a German patrol near the Fort at the harbour mouth.[3]
With other captured officers he was marched across northern France for about 10 days then taken by train from near Luxembourg to Trier, Mainz and onward to Oflag VII-CLaufen in Mid June 1940.
In March 1941 he was transferred to Stalag XXI-D, Poznań in Poland.
As a Prisoner of War he made several escape attempts. In May 1941, with two other British officers; Lieutenant Mike Sinclair and Gris Davies-Scourfield, he escaped by hiding in a modified handcart carrying rubbish to a pit outside the camp. They made contact with the Polish underground movement in Warsaw but, after parting company, Davies-Scourfield was recaptured in March 1942. Littledale and Sinclair were recaptured in Bulgaria after 8 months of freedom and handed back to the Germans.[3][5]
The three were all sent to Oflag IV-C at Colditz Castle, Littledale arriving there on 15 July 1942.[3][6]
On 15 October 1942, together with Captain Pat Reid, Lieutenant Commander William E. Stephens RNVR, and Flight Lieutenant Howard D. Wardle, he escaped from Colditz, and travelling with Stephens arrived in neutral Switzerland on 20 October 1942.[7]
Littledale left Switzerland on 25 January 1943, and with Flight Lieutenant Hedley Fowler, who had escaped earlier from Colditz, travelled across unoccupied France. They crossed into Spain on 30 January 1943, however they were arrested by the Spanish authorities later the same day.[8]
They were taken to a military prison at Figueras, where they were held in filthy and cramped conditions until 22 February 1943. Then they were taken to the British Consul in Barcelona. From there they travelled to Gibraltar arriving on 25 March 1943.[9]
Littledale returned to the UK shortly afterwards.
For his escape and actions whilst in captivity he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order on the 4 May 1943.[10]
He was killed in action on 1 September 1944, commanding the 2nd Battalion of the King's Royal Rifle Corps and is buried at Airaines Cemetery in France.[11]