Autumn (Fall) leaves mean Remembrance Day, November 11 in the UK , will soon be upon us. Since launching the ‘Blighty Thank God‘ podcast series 2 years ago it’s been downloaded over 2500 times. It’s an amazing milestone and only thanks to a lot of help. It’s also amazing to think my father’s ‘voice’ –…
Author: Neil Chapman
VE DAY: MORE THAN ONE MISSION
On VE Day 1945 I believe Flt Sgt Ron Chapman was on more than one mission.
His log book shows he flew a Douglas Dakota Mark III(KG 320) from RAF Broadwell in Oxfordshire making a quick stop at RAF Hartford Bridge, nr. Reading, before continuing on to Germany and then Denmark.
NEW YEAR NUMBER BUMP
Thanks to historical author Jessie Childs mentioning ‘Blighty Thank God’ during one of the UK’s leading history podcasts there was a holiday season jump in downloads to over 2000.
WORLDWIDE INTEREST
Without the internet, ‘Blighty Thank God’ couldn’t have happened. When the podcast series was first published in 2023, anyone, anywhere could access it via the web.
SEX, SPIES & LIES
What a joy when award-winning historical author Jessie Childs (pictured) contacted me via this website.
She found ‘Blighty Thank God’, published one year ago, when delving into the fascinating life of her diplomat grandfather, Stephen Childs.
D-DAY AT LAST
80 years ago, on June 6, 1944, Flt Sgt Ron Chapman was 5,000+km from the Normandy D-Day landings. Stationed in Egypt, he was probably ‘cheesed off’.
ENSA TRIBUTE
In my father’s war diary, ENSA – the Entertainments National Service Association – features regularly.
PAYING THE PRICE FOR FLYING THE ‘GRISLY BISLEY’
One ‘Blighty Thank God’ episode highlights the Bristol Blenheim V plane – or as pilots dubbed it – the ‘Grisly Bisley’. Through research into my late father’s (Flt/Sgt. Ron Chapman) 1943 war diary I learned how it earned its macabre reputation.
TESTING THE MIGHTY HURRICANE
Visit this website to see pictures of British Hawker Hurricane Mark IIb fighter – BE208. To my surprise my father – Flt Sgt. Ron Chapman of (xxx)- played a 6,000km part in its long journey from the UK to Asia.
SOMETHING BORROWED
This wedding photograph of my late parents – Ron and Monica Chapman – at St. Stephen’s Church, St. Albans, October 1946, was familiar to me growing up. After researching my father’s WW2 diary, discovered after both had died, it threw up a number of questions.









