Johnny Checketts: The Road to Biggin Hill - A Gripping Story of Courage in the Air and Evasion on the Ground

by Vincent Orange

Alan Deere (Foreword) and David Crooks (Afterword)

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Book cover for Johnny Checketts

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Johnny Checketts, widely recognised as one of the great fighter pilots of World War II, was born and raised in Invercargill, South Island, New Zealand. Considered by the locals to be a dare-devil motorcycle rider in his youth, it was natural that in 1939 he should join the RNZAF, then undergoing rapid expansion to its wartime strength of 33,000 men. In spite of being well over the average age for a fighter pilot, Johnny worked hard and turned out to be a great airman, tactician and leader in battle, achieving one of the highest scores of enemy aircraft destroyed in the air war over the Channel. He was shot down in September 1943 but avoided capture by the Germans with the help of the French Resistance - an absorbing story in itself. Rising to the rank of Wing Commander and being personally decorated by King George VI, after the war Johnny returned to New Zealand, left the service in 1955, founded an aerial topdressing company, and then lived in happy retirement until his death in 2006 at the age of 94.
He is one of the true, though modest, 'heroes' of the war and Vincent Orange tells his story in a relaxed and elegant style taking the reader through Johnny's exploits in a unique period of human history never likely to be repeated.
  • ISBN13 9781904943792
  • Publish Date 15 March 2007
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 15 October 2015
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Grub Street Publishing
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 208
  • Language English