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F/O Oldřich Doležal, DFC


Text: Pavel Vančata a Pavel Türk


Oldřich Doležal was born on March 1, 1912, on the threshold of adulthood he studied for four years at a small Richter radio receiver manufacturing company in Ostrava before joining the Baťa shoe company in Zlín as a machinist in 1931. From there, he enlisted on October 1, 1934, in Telegraph Battalion 4 in Prešov, Slovakia. After training as a radio operator, he served in Košice and Spišská Nová Ves, before retiring to the reserve as a private. He returned to Baťa, but now as a ground radiotelegrapher at the Otrokovice airport. After upgrading his qualifications, he began flying as an on-board radio operator and also underwent training as a sport pilot. On March 11, 1939, he took off with the company's Lockheed L-10A Electra on a business trip to Kraków, Poland, from where he continued to Belgrade, Yugoslavia, where he learned about the German occupation of his homeland. He therefore flew to the British Isles where he worked in the East Tilbury branch of the factory before joining the Army Reserve Corps at Cholmondeley Park in Great Britain on September 24, 1940.

Sgt. Oldřich Doležal while serving in the RAF. [J. Popelka]


In March 1941, he was reassigned to the air force at his own request, and with regard to pre-war military training, he began his aviation career in May 1941 as a ground radiotelegrapher with the No.312 (Czechoslovak) Fighter Squadron at Jurby Base on the Isle of Man. He was not satisfied with his assignment and managed to convince his commander to reassign him to pilot training. He went through the elementary part of it from July 1941 in Watchfield and followed it up with further training at Brize Norton Airfield. He was certified as a pilot of multi-engine aircraft with the rank of Sergeant on Christmas Day, 1941. He underwent operational training at 1429 COTF from April to September, 1942, as the second pilot of Sgt Václav Soukup's crew. He took off for the operational christening of the No.311 Squadron on October 24 as a member of F/Lt Bohuslav Eichler’s crew, and he was given command of his own crew in March 1943, when he held the rank of Flight Sergeant. From August 26, as a newly commissioned officer with the rank of Pilot Officer, he continued patrolling the Bay of Biscay on four-engine Liberators. German submarines avoided him for more than a year, but he made up for it on December 27, 1943. During his 52nd combat sortie, he claimed one of the greatest successes in the history of the unit - he sank the German blockade-breaker Alsterufer. This feat earned him the British Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) in January, 1944. He completed an operational tour of 69 patrol flights lasting 662 hours on August 17, and already by September 5 he enlisted in a course for transport pilots at No.105 (T) OTU in Bramcote. From December 12, 1944 until the end of the war, he then took the post of captain of transport Liberators with No.246 Squadron.

Oldřich Doležal on his return to his homeland. [J. Popelka]


In his liberated homeland, he continued to serve with the Air Transport Group with the rank of Lieutenant before demobilizing at the end of March, 1946 and returning to the Baťa company. In March 1948, he joined ČSA (Czechoslovak Airlines) and on March 25, 1950, he became one of the participants of a planned group flight. The crews of three transport Dakotas flying from Brno, Bratislava and Ostrava to Prague headed west and landed in Erding, Bavaria. He himself piloted the plane taking off from Bratislava, while his wife and six-month-old son flew from Ostrava in the plane flown by Captain Ladislav Světlík, a pilot with No.312 Squadron during the war. After returning to the UK, he found it very difficult to find employment. He worked as a clerk during the day and studied diligently in the evenings to obtain his commercial pilot's license in March 1954. At first he drove tourists around Europe, from 1957 he conducted aerial surveys for oil companies in Libya for two years. Here he also took part in one of the first expeditions to the recently discovered wreck of the American Liberator ‘Lady Be Good’. It went missing during a raid on Naples in 1943 and was presumed lost over the Mediterranean. Instead, the wreck lay in the Libyan desert since her demise.

On December 27, 1943 at 4:07 p.m., Doležal's crew flying Liberator GR Mk.V BZ796 "H" attacked the German armed merchant ship Alsterufer at 46°30' north latitude and 18°50' west longitude. An MC500 bomb hit the ship directly behind the superstructure and exploded inside the vessel. The photograph shows the spreading fire caused by the bomb and thick smoke above the ship. [Author’s Archive]

A sketch of the unfolding of the attack on the "blockade breaker" Alsterufer mentioned in the SURFAT Report by Doležal's crew. [Author’s Archive]


After returning from overseas, he flew until the spring of 1965, when he had to stop for health reasons. He briefly ran a retail business, became a journalist for the anti-communist agency Free Czechoslovak Information Service for a few years, and finally returned to his original electrical engineering profession in the fall of 1969. The pilot, who survived thousands of hours of war and post-war flying without a single scratch, had an unfortunate fall in January 1970 and remained bedridden until his death on november 28, 1983 at the age of 71. In 1991, he was posthumously promoted to the rank of Air Force Colonel.

(From the book ‘Riders In the Sky 1944‘, Pavel Türk, Pavel Vančata, Eduard, 2018)



October 28, 2023 


 "The President of the Republic awarded the Medal for Heroism in memoriam to Col. Oldřich Doležal for heroism in battle." 


 Oldřich Doležal (March 1, 1912 - November 28, 1983) - Military pilot. A native of Ostrava, he trained as a radio operator and in 1941 he joined the RAF in Britain, where he completed pilot training. He was then assigned to the 311th (Czechoslovak) Bombardment Squadron, where he took part in anti-submarine missions over the Bay of Biscay. His crew achieved one of the greatest successes of the Czechoslovak Republic in December 1943, when it sank the German ship Alsterufer, which was carrying strategically important tungsten supplies. In 1944, he took part in Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy, and then served in the Transport Air Force. After the war, he joined Czechoslovak Airlines. In 1950, he participated in the coordinated hijacking of three domestic airliners from Czechoslovakia. He was sentenced in absentia to 25 years in prison for this act. He died in 1983 in Britain.

 (Office of the President of the Czech Republic, Ministry of Defence, ČR)



Liberator GR Mk.V BZ796 (ex-USAAF B-24D-5-CF s/n 42-63819), originally in service with No.53 Squadron (A.L. "J"), transferred to No.311 Squadron on September 27, 1943 where it made its first flight on October 3, 1943. Received aircraft code "H". The aircraft's offensive armament consisted again, as a rule, of six or seven anti-submarine DC250 Mk.XI  depth charges in the bomb bay (in the case of an attack on shipping, then one GP250 bomb and one MC500 bomb) and eight unguided rockets suspended four by four on external carriers, fixed on both sides of the aircraft’s nose. He flew a total of 13 operational flights with No.311 Squadron - the first on November 10, 1943 and the last on February 4, 1944. On December 27, 1943, at 0945h, the German armed merchant ship Alsterufer (displacement 2,729 GRT) was sighted by Sunderland "T" of No.201 Squadron at 46°40'N, 19°30'W, carrying a cargo of strategic raw materials from the Japanese port of Kobe to Bordeaux. The Alsterufer had one 105 mm cannon, two 37 mm cannons, four 20 mm cannons and a cable barrage fired by rockets (P.A.C. = Parachute and Cable) for its defense. The Sunderland attack was not successful as the aircraft bombed through cloud cover. At 1135h a Sunderland coded "Q" of No.422 Squadron attacked, but the bombers missed the target. This was followed by a Sunderland coded "U" attack from No.201 Squadron which also bombed through the clouds, again without a visible hit. At 1607h Doležal's crew on Liberator "H" attacked the ship at 46°30'N and 18°50'W. The vessel was hit by five RP unguided rockets above the waterline, while the GP250 bomb missed the target, but the MC500 bomb hit the hull directly aft of the superstructure (behind the smokestack), exploding inside the ship and causing an extensive fire. The crew then began to abandon the ship. The burning Alsterufer was finally attacked between 1615h and 1630h by Liberator FL907 "F" of No.86 Squadron with one MC500 bomb, but missed. At 1714h, Liberator FL943 "L" of No.86 Squadron attacked the already abandoned wreck at 46°42'N 18°44'W with two MC500 bombs. Both missed the target, but one landed only 9 meters from the side of the ship. At 1800h, a second MC500 was dropped by Liberator FL907 "F", but that also missed. At 1758h, additional Allied aircraft, four Halifaxes as well as FAA Tarpons, were sighted in the area by the crew of Liberator FL907 "F". At 1800h, Halifax "Q" of No.502 Squadron reported that the ship was sinking at a position of 46°33'N, 18°55'W. Four hours after being abandoned by the crew, the Alsterufer sank. A total of 74 sailors from four lifeboats were picked up by ships of Escort Group 6 in the afternoon of December 29, 1943, at a position of 46°06'N, 19°10'W. The significant success of the No.311 Squadron was celebrated by extensive articles in the British press, and for their performance the aircraft captain P/O Oldřich Doležal and the navigator/bombardier F/O Zdeněk Hanuš were awarded the British Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC). All other crew members were awarded the Czechoslovak War Cross 1939. The aircraft (engine no. 4) was slightly damaged by fire from the ship (Cat A). On February 8, 1944 the Liberator was flown from Beaulieu to Prestwick to Scottish Aviation Ltd. On March 8, 1944, after the installation of the Leigh Light searchlight, it was assigned to No.1674 HCU. It was withdrawn from RAF service on June 21, 1947.

Liberator GR Mk.V, BZ796, P/O Oldřich Doležal, No.311 Squadron, Beaulieu, December, 1943

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