Sneha Girap (Editor)

Richard Joseph Audet

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Nickname(s)
  
"Dick"

Battles/wars
  
World War II

Service number
  
J/20136

Battles and wars
  
World War II


Years of service
  
1941 – 1945

Role
  
Fighter pilot

Allegiance
  
Canada

Name
  
Richard Audet

Rank
  
Flight lieutenant

Born
  
March 13, 1922 Lethbridge, Alberta (
1922-03-13
)

Awards
  
Distinguished Flying Cross & Bar

Died
  
March 3, 1945, Coesfeld, Germany

Service/branch
  
Royal Canadian Air Force

Richard Joseph "Dick" Audet (13 March, 1922 – 3 March, 1945) was a Canadian fighter pilot ace during World War II. In his first contact with enemy aircraft on 29 December, 1944 he destroyed five planes. By the end of January 1945 he had claimed a further five victories and shared a sixth. He was killed in action on 3 March, 1945 near Coesfeld, Germany.

Contents

Childhood

Audet was born on 13 March, 1922 in Lethbridge, Alberta, the youngest and sixth child of Paul and Edewisca Audet who were both born in Quebec. He grew up on the family ranch, in the Milk River valley, about two miles east of "Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park". With the exception of one year at Milk River Valley School he received all of his education to grade twelve in Coutts, Alberta. He was an outstanding athlete and loved all sports including hockey, basketball, and baseball. He was offered a position in Lethbridge to instruct and coach these sports, but he made up his mind to become a pilot. Too young to enlist, he attended business college in Lethbridge in 1940-41, then worked as a stenographer and bookkeeper at the air force base at High River.

Airforce career

Audet enlisted for service in the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) on 7 August, 1941 and received his pilot’s wings in October 1942. He was then posted to the UK where he received five months of advanced operational training followed by non-fighter operations. During this time he met and married Iris Gibbins from Northampton.

On September 20th, 1944, he was transferred to a RCAF Spitfire Unit, 411 Squadron. Later that year on 29 December, piloting a Spitfire IXe he destroyed two Bf 109s and three Fw 190s in five to seven minutes over Osnabrück. This action earned him a promotion to Flight Lieutenant and he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC).

On 3 March, 1945, Flight Lieutenant Audet was strafing a German train west of Münster. The train returned fire and Audet’s Spitfire crashed to the ground. There is some uncertainty as to whether he died in the crash or was captured, but his body was never recovered.

Audet had flown more than 50 combat sorties and added a bar to his DFC. In addition he was awarded the 1939-45 Star, Air Crew Europe Star with Clasp, France and Germany Star, Defence Medal, War Medal 1939–1945 and Canadian Volunteer Service Medal with Clasp.

Memorials

Flight Lieutenant Richard Joseph Audet has no known grave and his name is recorded on panel 278 of the Air Forces Memorial, or Runnymede Memorial, in England. and the Lethbridge cenotaph. His mother and wife both received a Memorial Cross in his honour.

References

Richard Joseph Audet Wikipedia