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Lieutenant-Colonel David Danger: SAS radio
operator
David Danger volunteered for what was, with
deliberate obscuration, called L Detachment, Special Air Service
Brigade, in the autumn of 1942, around the time when it was combined
with other special force units as 1st Special Air Service Regiment
under the command of David Stirling. |
Unlike other radio operators who served with 1st SAS between 1942 and
1945 who were usually attached, Danger underwent the full SAS training
regime at Kabrit near the Suez Canal and became a member of the regiment.
Despite being eager to get out on desert operations to the rear of the
Axis forces’ forward positions, persistent desert sores prevented him
until the July 1943 invasion of Sicily, when he landed at the port of
Augusta with the Special Raiding Squadron, as 1st SAS briefly became,
having hived off the Special Boat Section for operations elsewhere. The
Augusta assault was followed by the more demanding attack on the Italian
east coast port of Termoli on October 2, 1943. The plan involved two
commando units and the Special Raiding Squadron landing from the sea,
taking the town and two bridges to open the way for the advance of the
78th Infantry Division up the Adriatic coast. The operation was successful
but with significant losses to the SRS.
Danger returned to England with the re-formed 1st SAS to join the SAS
Brigade for operations in France to coincide with the Allied invasion of
Normandy in June 1944. By then a corporal radio operator, he dropped near
Dijon as the signaller for a party of Phantom — the GHQ Liaison Regiment
— operating with 1st SAS attacking railways linking Lyons and Paris. His
main task was to call in Allied air strikes in support of SAS operations.
On August 20, while with a maquis group two miles from the SAS base in
the Vienne forest, he was warned that a German force was about to encircle
it. At great personal risk he passed through the closing cordon to warn
his comrades, then returned through it to gather further information on
the enemy movements, allowing them to avoid the encirclement. He was
awarded the Military Medal in recognition of his initiative and personal
courage.
At the end of August Danger accompanied Lieutenant-Colonel Paddy Mayne
commanding 1st SAS to the Morvan area to link up with SAS groups operating
there, eventually returning to England after four months in
German-occupied areas of France. He accompanied the SAS Brigade sent to
Norway in May 1945 to assist in taking the surrender of German forces
there and in 1946-47 served with the Parachute Regiment in Palestine.
David Lambert Paxton Danger was born in Heswall, Wirral. At 16 he left
Birkenhead High School to begin a banking apprenticeship. After leaving
the Army on his return from Palestine, he married and joined 10th
Battalion The Parachute Regiment of the Territorial Army. He went back to
regular service in 1952 to be commissioned into the Royal Army Ordnance
Corps. He was appointed MBE in 1964 for his work during the Cyprus
emergency arising from intercommunal fighting at that time, in particular
the support of the reinforcement units sent to the island before
establishment of the UN force. He was promoted to lieutenant-colonel at
the age of 42, no mean achievement for a late-commissioned officer.
He is survived by his wife, Beryl, and a daughter. A son predeceased
him.
Lieutenant-Colonel D. L. P. Danger, MBE, MM, SAS veteran, was born
on March 4, 1923. He died on February 27, 2009, aged 85
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