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August 1942, British forces launched Operation Pedestal in an attempt to deliver supplies to the stricken island of Malta, an Allied base that had been under Axis blockade for months. From 9 to 15 August, a convoy of some fifty ships ran the gauntlet of Axis bombers, submarines, E-boats and minefields. Of the original fourteen merchant vessels, only five reached Malta Grand Harbour.In ‘I Wish I Had Your Wings’, Angus Mansfield relates the experiences of two men involved in Pedestal, Captain David Macfarlane of MV Melbourne Star and his nephew John Mejor, one of the Spitfire pilots who fought to protect the convoy. Told using their log books, letters and papers, and illustrated with images from the family archive, this is the story of one family’s contribution to a relief operation that cost over 400 Allied lives, but has gone down in history as one of the most important British strategic victories of the Second World War.
ANGUS MANSFIELD is the author of Barney Barnfather: Life on a Spitfire Squadron and Spitfire Saga: Rodney Scrase DFC, published by The History Press. He was educated at Wallington Grammar School and currently works in banking. He lives in Cornwall.
TitleCopyrightContentsForeword by Allan Scott DFCAcknowledgementsPrologue: Early Morning 13 August 19421 John Mejor: Early Days2 David Rattray Macfarlane: Early Days and First Convoy to Malta, Operation Substance, 19413 Malta and the Struggle for Survival4 Malta, May to August 1942: The ‘Dog’ and Sheer Bloody Exhaustion5 Operation Pedestal6 Rest and 2nd Tactical Air Force to D-DayEpilogue by Sally KeyesBibliography & Sources