Both were well treated and Alec was given sacking to tie around his foot, because he’d lost a boot, to make the walk to the nearby town of Konig to be processed as POWs. Quite how Sgt Hales managed it I don’t know but, escorted by three policeman they were in Konig by 10pm bound for the local jail.
However fate was about to play its hand. In October 1944 Hitler had ordered the creation of a national people’s militia known as the Volkssturm and in nearby Erbach some new recruits were holding a farewell party for their instructors. Nazi party member Georg Jaeger told the officer in charge, Lt Otto Maurer, about the fliers and local Nazi Party leader Wilhelm Schwinn ordered them to be rounded up, telling his men ‚you know what to do‘!
They ordered the police sergeant to hand Alec and Sgt Hales over and began marching them to Erbach. Lt Maurer and Jaeger drove ahead, stopping their car in the road and as the prisoners approached ordered them onto a path.
As they obeyed, a machine gun opened up and Alec died instantly, shot in the back. Sgt Hales vanished into the darkness but both bodies were found next morning.
The retribution meted out to Alec and Ben doubtless happened to other downed airman who simply reported ‚missing‘, despite the fact that summary execution contravened the Geneva Convention.
The police sergeant was over-ruled by his superiors when he tried to bring charges, even though Jaeger openly admitting the killings, albeit claiming they were attempting to escape.
You might think that in the Germany of 1944, with the invasion well under way, no-one would have cared about two Allied airman. But when the area was liberated by the Americans, a Russian POW reported what villagers had told him about the murders. An American Investigation Unit, coincidentally the same one that first entered Dachau concentration camp, took statements and the truth emerged.
The bodies of Alec and Ben were exhumed from their unmarked grave in the Bad Konig cemetery and autopsies, carried out by Lt Col Jesse E. Edwards who later became a prominent US heart surgeon, showed Alec was hit four times at very close range.
Schwinn, Maurer and two others were brought to justice. One other committed suicide before his war crimes trial and two more died in a car crash. The accused blamed each other but were all convicted and received sentences ranging from five to 15 years.
On the first anniversary of Alec’s death his mother Nell wrote to Sgt Hales’s mother; the pain and grief palpable in her words, recalling how in his letters Alec would say ‚we flew over your chimney pots again last night‘ and how she wished she could hear him say it again.
Those who perished alongside him Reading’s Sergeant Alec Bloomfield were Warrant Office Bernard Harrison – Pilot, Sergeant Richard ‚Ben‘ Hales – Flight Engineer, Sergeant Roland P Clancy – Mid Upper Gunner, Sergeant Tom D McGill – Tail Gunner, Warrant Office J R Sutton – Special Operator.
They flew, and now lie, together for eternity in the Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery at Durnbach, Munich. May they Rest In Peace.
I am indebted to David John Hales (Sergeant Hales‘ nephew) from Leavenheath, Suffolk, for generously sharing the huge amount of research he has undertaken. Without him this story could not be told.
Alec had numerous aunts, uncles and cousins in the Reading area, descendants of his great grandfather, Benjamin Bloomfield, a miller at the St Giles Mill in Mill Lane.
As a keen family historian, if any relatives would like to get in touch with me I would be delighted to hear from you.
Alec was a keen photographer – maybe one of you has his snaps?
email pic 3212bloom of Alec Bloomfield’s headstone in Munich credit David Hales