Home

» People

» James Lacey





James Lacey

Surname Lacey Given Name James Born 1 Feb 1917 Died 30 May 1989 Country United Kingdom Category Military-Air Gender Male

Contributor: Alan Chanter

ww2dbaseOne of the RAF's most famous fighter pilots of the Second World War, James Harry "Ginger" Lacey was born at Wetherby, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom on the 1st of February 1917. He was educated at King James Grammar School at Knaresborough and on leaving school, at the age of sixteen trained as a dispenser. In 1937 he enlisted into the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve (RAFVR) where he undertook basic flying training at weekends and during summer camps at Scone in Perthshire where he was assessed by his tutors as being "above average". In 1938 he completed an Instructors course and subsequently became a flying instructor with the Yorkshire Aeroplane Club which presented him with invaluable flying experience.

ww2dbaseSergeant Lacey was called up at the outbreak of war and in May 1940 with No. 501 (County of Gloucester) Squadron (an Auxiliary Air Force unit) went to France with the Advanced Air Striking Force. Bombed on the ground several times, Lacey nevertheless successfully downed five enemy aircraft over Dunkirk and on the 9th of June was almost drowned after making a forced landing in a bog. No. 501 Squadron remained in France following the evacuation of the BEF from Dunkirk and then moved, on 19 June, to Jersey in the Channel Islands where their Hurricane fighters covered the evacuation from Cherbourg, France. After this they returned to England to be based at Gravesend. For his achievements during the Battle of France Sergeant Lacey received a Mentioned in Despatches and the French Croix de Guerre.

ww2dbaseLacey remained with No. 501 until mid-1941, flying Hurricane fighters throughout the Battle of Britain. Of all the pilots who flew Spitfire and Hurricane fighters in the Battle of Britain, about a quarter were non-commissioned ranks (nearly all of them sergeants) and of these NCO pilots, about two fifths were Volunteer Reserve men like Lacey. During the battle Lacey was shot down twice (on the 12th and again on the 13th of August).

ww2dbaseOn the 30th of August, Lacey was badly shot up over the Thames estuary. Considering that he had sufficient altitude to glide as far as land, when he reached the Isle of Sheppey he decided to try and get all the way home in a shallow glide. As he neared Gravesend he pumped his undercarriage down and did the same for his flaps. With engine lifeless he made a perfect landing and rolled to a stop immediately in front of a camera crew who had filmed the whole landing. Lacey's pride at having brought his shattered Hurricane home safely would soon be shattered by the Engineering Officer who, surveying the eighty seven bullet holes in the plane, tartly commended "Why the hell didn't you bail out?... I'd have got a new aircraft tomorrow morning! Now I've got to set to work and mend it."

ww2dbaseOn the 13th September 1940 Lacey was the pilot who was scrambled to intercept a Heinkel He 111 raider that had bombed Buckingham Palace. On this occasion he was deliberately sent above totally unbroken cloud in the knowledge that he would need to bale out after engaging the enemy bomber (which he successfully managed to shoot down).

ww2dbaseHis score of "kills" was increased by eighteen during the Battle of Britain (15 scored during July-September and three more in October) easily eclipsing Frantisek's seventeen but being eclipsed himself by Eric Lock's twenty-two plus eight probables achieved between August and November. Badly shaken by the strain of continuous combat, Lacey pleaded with his Commanding Officer for a rest. The commanding officer whilst sympathetic was quite adamant that until he got replacements Lacey could not be spared from the squadron, but was happy to recommend Lacey for a commission which was bestowed in January 1941, at the same time as No. 501 Squadron converted to the Supermarine Spitfire Mk II fighter. He became a flight commander in June, after which he enjoyed a second run of successes, downing four more enemy aircraft and damaging another.

ww2dbaseIn August 1941 Lacey was posted as an instructor to No. 57 OTU at Hawarden in Wales, United Kingdom, after which he returned to Fighter Command with No. 602 (City of Glasgow) Squadron based at RAF Kenley in southern England. There he added to his score with two Fw 190 aircraft damaged in combat (on 24 March and 25 April). In May 1942 he was posted to HQ No. 81 Group as a Tactics Instructor and in September, he was transferred to the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE) where he was involved in testing rocket projectiles and cannons for anti-tank use. Finally, in November 1942 he was attached to the Special Attack Instructor's School as their Chief Instructor.

ww2dbaseIn March 1943 Lacey was posted to India to join No. 20 Squadron as it converted from Lysander to Hurricane aircraft. This was a short-lived posting, and in July he joined, as an instructor, a unit which was converting Blenheim equipped squadrons to Hurricanes and later, Hurricane squadrons into Thunderbolt dive bombers. In November 1944 he joined No. 155 Squadron, but was immediately moved to take command of No. 17 Squadron, where he scored his 28th and final victory - a Japanese Ki-43 "Oscar" aircraft. This was his first aerial victory since 1941, and was scored in a Spitfire Mk VIII fighter. It took his final tally to 28 destroyed, five probables and nine damaged, which put him seventh on the list of RAF's top scoring aces of World War II.

ww2dbaseNo. 17 Squadron's intended participation in the planned invasion of Malaya was forestalled by the Japanese surrender, although Lacey did gain one more distinction - that of being the first Spitfire pilot to fly over Japan on 30 April 1946. Ginger Lacey finally returned to the United Kingdom in May 1946, where he was awarded a permanent commission as a substantive Flight Lieutenant. He briefly flew Vampire aircraft from RAF Odiham in southern England before being placed on ground duties.

ww2dbaseGinger Lacey retired from the RAF, as a Squadron Leader, in March 1967, having spent the last years of his career as a fighter controller. He ran an air freight business after leaving the RAF, and also flew as an instructor with a civilian flying club.

ww2dbaseCancer claimed Lacey on 30 May 1989, aged 72.

ww2dbaseSources:

World Aircraft Information Files (Bright Star Publishing)

Len Deighton, Fighter - The True Story of the Battle of Britain (Treiad/Panther Books , 1979)



Last Major Revision: Jul 2012

James Lacey Timeline

Photographs

Did you enjoy this article? Please consider supporting us on Patreon. Even $1 per month will go a long way! Thank you. Share this article with your friends: Facebook

Reddit

Twitter

Stay updated with WW2DB: RSS Feeds

Visitor Submitted Comments

Show older comments

All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.