Peter Matthew OLEINIKOFF

OLEINIKOFF, Peter Matthew

Service Number: 425544
Enlisted: 28 March 1942
Last Rank: Pilot Officer
Last Unit: No. 575 Squadron (RAF)
Born: Suchun, Siberia, 1910
Home Town: Brisbane, Brisbane, Queensland
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Donkey driver (Mt Isa mines)
Died: Accidental (air crash), Folkington, England, United Kingdom, 6 February 1945
Cemetery: Brookwood Military Cemetery, Pirbright, Surrey, England, United Kingdom
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour
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World War 2 Service

28 Mar 1942: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Aircraftman 2 (WW2), 425544, Brisbane, Queensland
28 Mar 1942: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Pilot Officer, 425544
6 Feb 1945: Involvement Royal Australian Air Force, Pilot Officer, 425544, No. 575 Squadron (RAF), Air War NW Europe 1939-45

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Biography contributed by John Edwards

"Peter Matthew Oleinikoff was born on 5 October 1910 in Suchun, Siberia and emigrated to Australia with his parents two years later, in 1912. The family settled in Cordalba, Queensland. His father, Matjeus Oleinikoff was naturalised in 1915, enlisted in 1916 as a reinforcement with 26th Battalion AIF, although an old fracture of his left tibia and fibula saw him invalided home from England. With his wife Dorrie, they had seven children.

Peter Oleinikoff was working as a labourer at the Mount Isa mines when he enlisted with the RAAF on 28 March 1942. After training he flew with 233 Squadron of RAF Transport Command in 1944, flying DC-3s, bringing the wounded back from the Normandy battlefields. He was transferred to 575 Squadron, RAF, also operating DC-3s and promoted to pilot officer. On the morning of 6 February 1945 he was piloting DC-3 KG630 in thick fog from Thornley Island, Hampshire to Rosieres-en-Santerre airfield in France, loaded with British, Australian, Canadian and New Zealand airforce personnel from 140 Wing – 20 men, plus the 4 crew members. His second pilot was Flight Sergeant Edgar Barsby, also an Australian. Just after 10.00 am the DC-3 struck the side of a hill near Folkington on the South Downs, the starboard wing broke off and the aircraft crashed into a wood. It immediately caught fire, killing all on board. Ground rescuers were hampered by the lack of water and it was 6.00 pm before the last body was recovered. Peter Matthew Oleinikoff is buried at the Brookwood Military Cemetery in Surrey." - SOURCE (www.awm.gov.au)

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