Travels with Churchill
A World War II flight engineer dishes on the most “I” of the VIPs he flew with.
- By Graham Chandler
- Air & Space magazine, July 2009
The sturdy B-24 that served as Churchill's personal transport.
Library of Congress
Winston Churchill was anxious to leave the country. It was July 1942, and he wanted to go to Cairo and Moscow to confer with his generals and with Soviet leader Josef Stalin, but the pilot assigned to fly him urged caution. “I’d like…a bad night to get out of England to go to Gibraltar,” William J. Vanderkloot told the British prime minister. Years later, he explained to his son, Bill, “I didn’t want to get shot down over England.”
Vanderkloot was recounting, in a taped interview with his son, how he came to be the captain of a B-24 Liberator bomber that had been turned into a VIP transport. “Mr. Churchill said, ‘Go ahead, pick your night,’ ” Vanderkloot recalled. “ ‘I can give you a 10-day envelope.’ ” The long-range Liberator, painted black in an early attempt at stealth, flying at night, with no one but the crew knowing the flight plan, was considered the safest bet to transport a prime minister on a route that was within range of enemy fighters.
In the late summer of 1942, Churchill was faced with critical decisions, notably what to do about weaknesses in the leadership of the British Eighth Army, which was facing Field Marshal Erwin Rommel’s formidable Afrika Korps, as well as how to persuade Stalin to reinforce Europe’s eastern front. “It had become urgently necessary for me to go there and settle the decisive questions on the spot,” Churchill wrote in The Second World War. But such a trip would have ordinarily involved six days of flying and several nasty inoculations. “However,” he continued, “there arrived at the Air Ministry a young American pilot, Captain Vanderkloot, who had just flown from the United States in the aeroplane ‘Commando,’ a Liberator plane from which the bomb-racks had been removed and some sort of passenger accommodation substituted…. I could be in Cairo in two days without any trouble about Central African bugs…”
Vanderkloot had been flying U.S.-built bombers across the north Atlantic, known for its deadly weather, for the Royal Air Force’s Ferry Command for some 18 months and had logged over a million miles, occasionally carrying VIPs to exotic sites. Such credentials, along with renowned navigation skills, brought him to the attention of Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal, responsible for transporting Churchill through Africa. When Portal asked Vanderkloot how he would fly to Cairo, the Ferry Command pilot told him: “Certainly not through the Mediterranean with the Germans flanking both sides,” and suggested a route with a single stopover in Gibraltar. Portal hired him on the spot, and Vanderkloot chose the B-24. “That was some airplane, the Liberator,” Vanderkloot later said. “Nicely built.”
Commando got under way. In Cairo, Churchill eventually replaced Eighth Army General John Eyre Auchinleck with Lieutenant General Bernard Montgomery. On October 24, the Associated Press reported, “Britain’s rebuilt and refreshed 8th Army charged into the Axis’ El Alamein line today in…what may be the battle to decide the fate of the Mediterranean this winter.” Liberators were part of the action. The September 3, 1942 issue of Britain’s Flight magazine ran the headline “Liberators over Egypt: Anglicized Heavies in Western Desert.” In Moscow, Churchill met with Averell Harriman, representing the United States, and Stalin to plan the North African campaign.
Churchill was enthralled with flight. He celebrated his 39th birthday by taking his first flying lesson. According to Churchill biographer Martin Gilbert, when the prime minister’s instructor was killed shortly afterward, Churchill’s wife and family expressed their sentiments about his taking up a pastime “fraught with so much danger to life,” as his cousin, Sunny Charles, ninth Duke of Marlborough, put it. “It is really wrong of you,” the duke continued. After takeoff at London’s Croydon airport, Churchill stalled his trainer in a tight turn, plowing into the ground and injuring his instructor. He vowed never to fly as a pilot again.
But he still enjoyed air travel. “He used to like to come up [to the cockpit],” Vanderkloot said. “He’d stay maybe an hour, and he’d ask questions about things. He was a good old sport, he’d have his scotch up there and look around.”
Commando was usually flown by Vanderkloot and another American, copilot Jack Ruggles. Flight engineers John Affleck and Ronnie Williams and radio officer Russ Holmes were Canadian. Today, Affleck is the only surviving crew member. He joined Vanderkloot on the first run with Churchill in August 1942. At the time, the young civilian flight engineer and racing car enthusiast was in West Palm Beach, Florida, fresh off a Liberator that had flown ammunition to Africa for the Eighth Army. “You didn’t have to be in the military to do that—they’d take anybody,” says Affleck. When asked if he would go to Cairo that night, he said, “Sure, I always wanted to see Cairo.”
At 93, Affleck still walks nine holes at the Saskatoon Golf & Country Club. Relaxing at his home in Saskatchewan in khaki chinos and a golf shirt, he remembered that night in 1942. “So they said, ‘Get the car, get some clothes, and come back.’ I was on the way to Prestwick [Scotland] that night.”
From Prestwick they flew to Lyneham Royal Air Force base and on to London. “And there is where we learned we were to fly Churchill out to Cairo and Moscow,” says Affleck. It was also there that he learned he was to fly with the legendary William J. Vanderkloot. “I didn’t know him well because our paths hadn’t crossed,” says Affleck, “but I knew he was a good pilot—in fact an excellent, super pilot. And a super navigator too.”





Comments (6)
Caps aloft. This is a classy review of that airship and the only question I had in my mind at the finish of the story: Go ask Affleck: what were the things about Churchill that bothered him? Ask that fine writer to send it off to Winston Churchill.org for inclusion in our newsletters; many say WSC didn't drink much atall, you know.
Posted by Dave Marcus on May 25,2009 | 08:45 PM
The engines on that "B-24" don't look right. Was that really the cargo variant, a C-87, instead of a real B-24? I believe they would have been available by that time. EDITORS' REPLY: Churchill’s Commando was actually a “Liberator II,” built for the British air force. It was similar to our B-24C, But you’re right in that the C-87 would have been around at the time; it entered production in April 1942, just before our Churchill story begins, in July.
Posted by Stu Brennan on May 28,2009 | 12:49 PM
Great article. I read of Churchills journeys by air in his History of World War II books and came across this site as I was reminiscing about some of his passages and wondering what the aircraft looked like. A Canadian myself, I never knew some of the flight crew was Canadian until just now. An interesting read, thanks.
Posted by CJ on September 29,2011 | 05:14 AM
I was 16 by war's end. I survived the blitz, V1s & V2s
in London. I live in Brighton, Ontario, and often visit
Trenton airbase nearby. Watching a 1941 movie starring
Tyrone Power,"A Yank in the RAF", he ferries a twin
engine "Liberator" (with windows) from the US to Trenton
Airforce Base, and then on to England. He then becomes an
RAF flying officer, and goes on missions over Germany, in
a non-existent twin-engine "Liberator" with windows!
I wish we had an authentic B24, with 4 engines, in the
Trenton RCAF museum, that I remember seeing in WW 2.
Posted by Laurence Ryan on January 7,2012 | 10:56 AM
Captain VanDerKloot: I have just seen your movie "Flying the Secret Sky", it is a great movie covering a portion of WW2 military history that most people never heard of. My father Lloyd Rondeau also flew for the ferry command, and after the war ended up flying corporate aviation out of many airfields, including HPN. White Plainsn N.Y. His last corporate job was with EDO corp., hangar F, HPN. I was a line boy during the sixties and went on to fly for corporations in New York and Pittsburgh. I joined North Central Airlines and retired recently from Delts airlines. When i flew the north atlantic never did a flight go by that i did not remember the efforts, losses and heroism that all of you young aviators and crews suffered. Thank you for my dad, my family and all others involved for presenting this history. Sincerely: Bill Rondeau, Captain, Delta Airlines, Ret.
Posted by bill rondeau on May 10,2012 | 03:38 PM
Flew B-24s in WWII...was the pilot of the plane called "the sandman" which was photographed over the burning refinery at Ploesti, Romania on Aug. 1, 1943. This same B-24 carried Col Jake Smart who was the father of the plan to bomb Ploesti oil refineries at low altitude. I flew him on his first bombing mission in July 1943 this article about Churchill using a B-24 for his personal use is new to a great number of people..many think the only bomber in WWII was the B-17..so called Flying Fortress. Actually the B-24 series of planes did more destruction dropping more bombs than all the other bombers used by the us air force (corps)..B-24 carried 2 times the bomb load of a B-17.... So many negative reports have been made about the B-24, that the article gives good reasons why the B-24 was selected for w. Churchill. ..why British selected the B-24 for Churchill? they had nothing that could match the range and speed of the B-24. Comment made on engines...yes they looked strange..it must be only British as i flew the B-24d that was made in 1942 and did not have the look of what this picture shows..also note needle props. Later models had paddle blades so this model was an early 1942.
Posted by Robert W. Sternfels on February 1,2013 | 02:44 AM