Date: 02/11/2012
Views: 5041
Owner: Pete Rogers (Admin)
Warrant Officer Class I , Harold Beesley
In Memory of Warrant Officer Class I, 549217, Harold Edwin Beesley,13th/18th Royal Hussars, Royal Armoured Corps and No 3 Commando, who died, aged 39 on 10 March 1945. Harold was captured at Dieppe and imprisoned. See his nephew's letter below regarding his death.
Remembered with honour at Krakow Rakowicki Cemetery
(photo and CWGC details posted by Pete R.)
Details updated 18/9/10 by Pete R . The following information is from William Paterson, nephew of RSM Beesley
" Dear Sir I have just found your website on the net (Wonderful) and have found a picture of my Uncle RSM Harold Beesley, 3 Commando. The notes accompanying the picture state that he died a POW, can I give some information which clears up his death. An excellent book was published in the UK by CORONET books called in the UK “The Dieppe Raid” and in Canada “Forgotten Heroes” written by John Mellor. This book relates the story of Harry Beesleys capture and imprisonment, since he was captured at Dieppe with the Canadian forces he stayed with the Canadians throughout this time in POW camps. A few excerpts give a clue to his character “The water had been cut off in the Canadian compound, and only a little was allowed for drinking. One bitter morning the entire compound and German guards were amazed to see RSM Beesley march smartly across the parade ground, halt at a puddle of freezing water, strip to the waist, wash and shave, redress, wrap his towel around his neck and march back to the barracks. This was not to show his toughness but to raise morale and show contempt for his captors. The water was turned back on shortly afterwards”. There are lots of similar anecdotes, too many for this email.
As the Russians neared Stalug V111B the main body of the Dieppe prisoners were sent on a death march through blizzards and frost until they reached Stargard, Stalug 11D, Harry Beesley did not survive. At the time of writing, some Canadians said he was shot by the Russians for demanding food, but a few years ago, my Aunt, Harrys widow received a letter from Mr Ivor Dunstan stating “from Stalug 11D, Harry was moved to camp BAB21 at Blechammer in upper Silesia. There on Christmas Day 1944 Harry and Ivor Dunstan managed to escape and made there way to Cracow, Poland. There the Russians made plans for them to go to Odessa and passage to England. Early in February 1945 they were loaded onto an ancient train with hundreds of freed prisoners, crowded 30 to a carriage, although there was a pot bellied stove for heat there was no fuel for it. The journey was supposed to take 5 days, but it stretched to 10 and the train was not many miles from the start, desperate for heat, Harry led the prisoners to repeated raids to coal dumps. During one of these raids, two of the train coaches became uncoupled and started to roll back down a steep incline, Harry immediately ran after the coaches and attempted to apply the brake fitted to each side of the coaches. As the coaches slowed they “jumped” tracks trapping Harry underneath. The two coaches were packed with French Slave workers, many of whom would have been killed if Harry had not applied the brakes. Harry Beesley died as he had lived, helping others”. He is buried in grave 4 B 5 Cracow Rakowicki Cemetry, Poland.I though this information should be available to visitors to your website, Harry’s widow dies earlier this year aged 99, and I seen to be the last keeper of this knowledge."