WHEN Frank Risbridger joined the 9th Royal Tank
Regiment he thought it might be a relatively safe option. After all, in a
Churchill you had four inches of steel around you.
Operation Epsom changed his mind. His tank, “Impertinent”,
was hit by an 88 mm German shell.
“The crew jumped out into a cornfield but I couldn’t move,”
he said. “The lanyard attached to my revolver holster had snagged.
“Petrol in the tank had caught fire and my trousers were
alight.
“Eventually I freed myself and jumped out. Six seconds later
the tank blew up. It was a lucky escape.”
Two close friends had not been so lucky. David Gotobed and
Roy Painter both had their legs shot away. Frank visits their graves regularly.
This action took place near the Normandy village of Cheux.
“We went in with 1000 Gordon Highlanders,” said Frank. “And we came out with
just 125 of them.”
The 9th Royal Tank Regiment became attached to
the 43rd Wessex Division fighting hard to take Hill 112 in Operation
Jupiter.
“I went up and down that Hill 29 times,” said Frank. “On one
day 400 tanks were knocked out, both British and German.”
Once the notorious Hill 112 had been taken, the 9th
pressed on through the Falaise Gap towards L’Havre. Near the town they
encountered a V1 “doodle bug” on its launch ramp.
Frank’s tank brought its gun to bear on the deadly missile,
fired, and there was a massive explosion. “I felt good about that one,” said
Frank. “It meant people at home weren’t going to be killed by it.”
Through Belgium and Holland the newly liberated populations
gave the tanks a warm welcome.
After the debacle of Arnhem they kept the Panzers busy so
that Allied troops could get away.
Crossing the Rhine at Rees on a pontoon bridge constructed
by Royal Engineers the tanks later fought their way through the Reichwald
Forest. “We were in the tank for six days never once getting out,” said Frank.
In answer to the obvious question relating to personal
comfort, he said: “You used a shell case and chucked it out.”
In the build up to D-Day the 9th Royal Tank
Regiment was based at Eastling, near Faversham, and trained in the grounds of
Eastwell Manor.
Frank couldn’t face going back to Normandy until the 50th
anniversary celebrations in 1994. Now he is chairman of the Canterbury Normandy
Veterans Association and goes back every year. He is also well known for
presenting the prizes at the War and Peace Show.
   
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