Lest We Forget · A Tribute to Bunbury's Service Personnel
· Biography ·

FLYNN, Doctor Joseph Ignatius

Captain · Unit 5 Medical Staff · 1902

Boer War · 1902

FLYNN

Doctor Joseph Ignatius

John Yorke Clarke was born to parents Raymond Arthur Clarke and Marjorie Cecil Clarke (nee Clifton) on 13 June 1922. He left Bunbury High School in 1938 and worked on an apple orchard in Capel. When the Second World War broke out, John initially enlisted in the 10th Light Horse Regiment based in Bunbury.

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John then enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force on 21 July 1941, and after gaining his wings in Western Australia, was posted as a Pilot to the United Kingdom. He flew Halifax Bombers, and after his 15th operation was promoted to Pilot Officer.

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Unfortunately, on the night of 28 August 1943, John's aircraft was shot down by a night fighter en-route to Nuremberg, Germany. Three of his crew were also killed by the cannon fire, whilst the remaining three crew were able to parachute safely to the ground.

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John was only 21 years of age and is buried in the Rheinberg War Cemetery near Cologne, Germany (Memorial Reference 8. F. 21). He is memorialised at Bunbury Cemetery, Anglican D 682.

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John's father, Raymond Arthur Clarke, endured the heartbreak of losing two sons in the RAF during raids over Germany — John in 1943, and his brother Robert Mayo Clarke on 8 January 1945.

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