The Collection of Second World War and Modern Gallantry Awards formed by the late William Oakley
Nor was the run-in to Sword beach, or the actual landing, an uneventful one, No. 4’s M.O. recalling that ‘bullets rattled against the craft and splinters whined overhead ... There was thick smoke over the beach, and the tide low but flooding. There were many bodies in the water; one was hanging round one of the tripod obstacles. The shoals were churned with bursting shells. I saw wounded men among the dead, pinned down by the weight of their equipment’. Another witness recalled seeing ‘bodies lay sprawled all over the beach, some with legs, arms and heads missing, the blood clotting the wet sand’.
These harrowing first scenes were largely the result of the reception afforded the men of the East Yorkshires, who had been sent ahead to clear the beaches of mines and other obstacles before the arrival of Commandos. Nonetheless, at least one enemy pill-box was still very much in action as James and his comrades made their way up to the enemy’s wire, and before too long No. 4 Commando had its own mounting casualties, estimated by this stage to be to the tune of 40 men. Their first task had been to storm the enemy’s battery at Ouistreham, but in the event that “honour” fell to the French Commandos, or certainly the spearhead of the attack, which ended in victory after a ferocious hand-to-hand encounter. Thereafter, the survivors from No. 4 commenced fighting their way inland, in order to link up with the Airborne on the River Orne, an objective achieved after further casualties, that evening, the latter including their C.O.
And it was at the same location, on a ridge near Sallenelles, beside Hauger Chateau, that James won his M.C. 48 hours later, when he so courageously fended off a determined counter-attack and saved D Troop, then commanded by Dieppe V.C. winner Captain “Pat” Porteous.
Originally it had been intended that the Commandos would be withdrawn from the frontline after a few days, but such was the ferocity of the enemy’s resistance that James and his comrades in No. 4 remained on active service in France until early September - by D-Day + 4 alone, the Commando’s strength had been reduced from 455 officers and men to 160; see James Dunning’s The Fighting Fourth and Murdoch McDougall’s Swiftly They Struck, for full details of these operations.
Also described as having onetime been attached to No. 47 (Royal Marine) Commando, it is not known whether James was still with No. 4 at the time of the famous Walcheren landings.
He remained in the Territorial Army after the War and onetime served as a Captain in the South Staffordshire Regiment. 602
A poignant Second World War North Africa operations D.C.M. group of five awarded to Sergeant A. Darby, Royal Artillery, who commanded a mobile Deacon gun of 76th Anti-Tank Regiment in a classic desert action against Tiger tanks and 88mm. guns - hit in the chest by a shell splinter he died of his wounds just over two months later
DISTINGUISHED CONDUCTMEDAL,
G.VI.R. (46566 Sjt. A. Darby, R.A.); 1939-45 STAR; AFRICA STAR; DEFENCE ANDWARMEDALS 1939 -45, together with original Army Council condolence slip in the name of ‘Sgt. A. Darby, D.C.M.’, good very fine or better (5)
£3000-3500 D.C.M. London Gazette 1 June 1943. The original recommendation for an immediate award states:
‘On the morning of 27 March 1943, at first light, the rear of the Divisional Artillery Group which was situated about (T.) Y9313, was attacked by some ten tanks and four 88mm. guns. Sergeant Darby was commanding a Deacon 6-pounder which was travelling near the rear of the column. The going was extremely bad but Sergeant Darby extricated his Deacon and drove straight for the oncoming tanks and 88mm. guns, one of which was already in action, and he wheeled his gun into action and immediately engaged the enemy, getting off some eight rounds before his gun was knocked out.
By his prompt and gallant action he unquestionably halted the whole enemy force and made them pause for a vital five minutes during which the rest of the Battery, which was strung out along the column and some distance away, was able to concentrate and engage the enemy on good terms. As a result, all four 88mm. guns and tanks were knocked out. The action was witnessed by many of his comrades who are unanimous in his praise. Sergeant Darby was wounded in this action.’
Albert Darby was 29 years of age at the time of his death and left a widow, Edith Lillian, of Ladywood, Birmingham. He is buried in the Tripoli War Cemetery.
A good account of 76th Anti-Tank Regiment’s part in the early stages of the Mareth battle in March 1943 appears in the Royal Artillery Commemoration Book 1939-45, so, too, mention of Darby’s gallantry in the action near El Hamma on 27 March 1943:
‘A single Deacon had a stalking match with a Tiger Mk. VI tank, but did not succeed in getting within effective range. The Tiger had had a 17-pounder shot through the piece, so was naturally not anxious to close. Soon afterwards the crew of this Tiger abandoned it and came walking across the desert. They were a tough gang, extremely truculent and with a lot to say for themselves. Apart from the Deacon which had a wheel smashed in the first few minutes, the only other mishaps were a shot through the cab of another Deacon, and another that disabled the steering-gear. Both these vehicles were left on the ground but recovered some time later. The shot through the cab wounded Sergeant Darby, the No. 1, who had so gallantly sailed in first to attack the enemy tanks and 88s at the beginning of the action; he had a splinter in the chest which was thought nothing of at first. He died, however, some three months later in a Tripoli hospital from lung trouble, having meanwhile received a D.C.M.’
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