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Charles Stanley (Stanley) Mossop DSC | |||
Rank: | Lieutenant | Number: | X P.I. 38880 |
Ship/Rgn/Sqn No: | 243 Sqn (Cherbourg) | ||
Name of Rgt or Ship: | Royal Air Force | ||
Died: | 13/08/1918 | Age: | 20 |
How Died: | Killed in Action | ||
Country of burial: | France | Grave Photo: | Yes |
Cemetery or Memorial: | Tourlaville Communal Cemetery & Extension | ||
Town Memorial: | Not Listed | ||
Extra Information: | |||
Born on either the 22nd or the 27th June 1898. (his RAF record states both) at St. Lawrence, Jersey, the younger son of Charles and Eliza Mossop (neé Southward). 1901 Census - Bifrons, St. Lawrence, Jersey, Channel Islands. Son (Listed as C. Stanley Mossop) - aged: 2 - born: St. Lawrence, Jersey. Head of household - Charles Mossop - Married - aged: 37 - occ: Market Gardener (own account) - born: England. Also - Eliza Mossop - Wife - aged: 31 - born: England. Plus 1 elder brother. 1911 Census - Commercial Buildings, Pier, Jersey, Channel Islands. Son (Listed as Stanley Charles Mossop) - aged: 12 - Scholar - born: St. Lawrence, Jersey. Head of household - Charles Mossop - Married - aged: 47 - occ: Merchant & Commission Merchant - born: Calder Bridge, Cumberland. Also Eliza Mossop - Wife - aged: 41 - born: Liverpool. Plus 1 elder brother and 1 domestic servant. He was an Apprentice Marine Engineer employed by Scotia Engine Works, Sunderland from 18th August 1914 to 30th November 1916. This eventually became - Richardson, Westgarth Co , Marine Engineers of Hartlepool. He originally enlisted in the Royal Naval Air Service and was drafted to HMS Victory VI - the Crystal Palace Shore Station on the 17th December 1916. From Crystal Palace he moved to Redcar on the 2nd March 1917 - to Cranwell on the 5th May 1917 - to Calshot on the 4th June 1917. He was appointed Flight Sub. Lieutenant on the 30th August 1917. His record shows that he had flown a wide range of aircraft, including - NFLH, Curtiss Flying Boat, Avro 80hp Gnome, BE2C (75 hp Renault engine), BE2C (100hp Rolls Royce engine), Bristol Scout, Short Seaplane (150hp Sunbeam engine), Norman Thompson Flying Boat, FBA (Franco-British Aircraft), Campania Short (375hp engine), [I believe that to be HMS Camania, a converted aircraft carrier - flying Short A/c from it ???], Wight Seaplane (300hp engine). To survive any flight in these experimental aircraft was an achievement. Awarded the Distinguished Service Cross on the 17th November 1917. He was hospitalised on the 29th June 1918 and again on the 20th July 1918. Death reported in the 24th and 26th August 1919 editions of the Liverpool Echo which states that he was killed in a seaplane accident whilst on patrol. He was buried at Cherbourg on the 16th August. I can find no connection to Stretford or to St. Matthew's Parish Church. His mother was born at Liverpool - it is possible that his Southward grandparents moved to Stretford later in life and attended St. Matthew's P.C. ??? His RAF record states that his parents were residing at 22 Commercial Buildings, St. Helier, Jersey. and that he had a "Fair knowledge of French" French M.I. - "Dearly loved son of Mr. & Mrs. C. Mossop of Jersey. Resting". On the 4th August 2015, "Jersey Post" issued a £1.00 commemorative miniature sheet depicting Stanley and giving the following background information:- "The Miniature Sheet features an illustration of Jerseyman, Flt Lt Charles Stanley Mossop DSC, the first man to sink an enemy submarine from the air and the first Jerseyman to land a plane in the Island. In August 1918, whilst on an aerial photo-reconnaissance mission, he decided pay a visit to his parents in St Helier, and in doing so becoming the first Jerseyman to land a plane in Jersey. Mossop was tragically killed in a flying accident in France two days later." |
Memorials found on: | |||
St. Matthew's (Stretford) | |||
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