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RAF veteran to be honoured for daring Resistance missions

France to recognise the bravery of Bournville navigator with the Légion d’honneur

RAF hero Bill Barfoot, 95, from Bournville, is to receive the Légion d'honneur from the French Government

A Second World War RAF navigator who undertook daring missions to help the French Resistance behind enemy lines is to be awarded the Légion d’honneur, the highest honour the French government can bestow.

Bill Barfoot, 95, of Oaktree Lane, Bournville, is being recognised for his service as a navigator in the RAF on D-Day and for the supply drops he completed for the SAS, undercover agents and the French Resistance.

Mr Barfoot, who was a navigation officer in 296 Squadron, which specialised in , said: “This is really a great honour to receive this award – I only wish my captain were still alive so I could say, ‘Snap!’”

Mr Barfoot was born in Newcastle in 1919 but moved to India when he was six years old, where his father was a police officer.

He said: “I met the woman who would become my wife, Doreen, whose family was also in India, but I didn’t marry her until 1943 when we met again in Britain.”

He was married to Doreen, who served in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force during the war, for 69 years until her death in 2013.

They moved to Birmingham after the war where Mr Barfoot became Station Commander at Aerodrome in 1954 and oversaw a number of Battle of Britain display ceremonies.

Mr Barfoot remembers his time in the RAF fondly: “I very much enjoyed my time in the air force and I would have liked it to have gone on longer.