Pte.
Edward Joseph Burns
Military Details
Service Number: 5886391
Regiment & Unit / Ship
2nd (Airborne) Ox & Bucks L.I
Service Branch
Army
Enlistment Details
Residence at Enlistment
St Trinians Hall , Richmond , North Yorks .
Rank at Enlistment
Pte.
Battalion at Enlistment
2nd (Airborne)
Service Number at Enlistment
5886391
Service History
Battalion War Diary Extract
The 2nd Battalion, Oxford and Buckinghamshire (Ox and Bucks) Light Infantry were stationed in India on the North West Frontier (as 52nd Ox and Bucks Light Infantry) at the start of the Second World War, before being recalled to the UK. In the early years of the war, they formed part of the 31st Independant Infantry Brigade, undertaking Home and Coastal Defence roles in Wales, East Anglia, London and Kent.
At this stage in the war, the British Airborne Forces consisted of just the 1st Parachute Brigade. In September 1941 however, the War Office decided that a Brigade of glider infantry should be raised to compliment them. The 31st Infantry Brigade was selected for this task and accordingly, on 10 October 1941, it was renamed the 1st Airlanding Brigade. In addition to the 2nd Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry, this experimental formation consisted of a further three battalions; the 1st Battalion, Border Regiment, 1st Battalion, Royal Ulster Rifles, and 2nd Battalion, South Staffordshire Regiment.
Gliders were seen as a necessary method of supporting airborne operations, as they were able to carry additional infantry to reinforce the parachute brigades, and also heavy equipment, such as jeeps and Anti-Tank Guns. It was this factor, and the subsequent formation of the 1st Airborne Division, that made it possible for the role of the British Airborne Forces to advance beyond the small-scale and infrequent commando raids that had been previously envisaged.
The transformation to an Airborne Battalion saw the 2nd Ox and Bucks remain in England and start training for the planned invasion of North West Europe the following year as part of the redesignated 6th Airlanding Brigade of 6th Airborne Division. Elements of the Battalion (D Coy and parts of B Coy) formed a Coup de Main force, tasked with an attack on the bridges over the River Orne and adjacent Canal in Normandy (subsequently known as the attack on Pegasus Bridge).
The Battalion's involvement in the successful Coup de Main action at Pegasus Bridge, under Major John Howard proved one of the most remarkable British Airborne actions during the Second World War. The 2nd Battalion itself would continue to see Airborne action however, serving as part of the 6th Airborne deployment to the Ardennes and the Rhine Crossing in early spring 1945.
Personal Details
Date of Birth
8th August 1919
Place of Birth
Cleator Moor
Religion
RC
Address
29 Jacktrees Rd , Cleator Moor
Residence (Census)
105 Allen Road . Irthlingborough , Northamptonshire
Residence (Roll of Honour)
26 Grange Road , Pendleton Salford , Manchester
Parents
James and Elizabeth
Siblings
Tommy (1921-1983), Kathleen (1924-2019), Peter (1926 and living in Australia), Philomena (1931-2022) and James (1936-2020), (2 other children died as babies
Education and Occupation
School
St Patricks
Occupation
In Service for St James Radcliffe
Death and Memorial
Date of Death
24th March 1945
Age at Death
24
Circumstances of Death
Eddie took part in operation Varsity (Rhine Crossing). 24 March 1945 – 2 May 1945.
Eddie was killed in action on 24 March 1945, aged 25, and was given a field burial at Hamminkeln and was re-interred to Reichswald Forest War Cemetery on 16 April 1947.
The Burns family applied for Eddie’s medals after his death and they are with Eddie’s last remaining sibling, Peter, who lives in Australia and is 98 years old.
Place of Death
Kleve, Kreis Klev
Theater of Action
Western Europe
Battle
Reishswald Forest
Battalion/Vessel at Death
2nd Airborne
Rank at Death
Pte.
Notes
Edward (Eddie) Joseph Burns was born in Cleator Moor, Cumbria on 8 August 1919 to Elizabeth (nee Bryan) and James Burns. He was named after his paternal Grandfather. James’s family originated from Northern Ireland and Elizabeth’s from Southern Ireland. They settled in Cleator Moor, Cumbria during the potato famine. The area was called Little Ireland due to the number of Irish people moving there. The area was a mining area.
James’s family owned pubs, houses and a grocers shop in Cleator Moor. There are records that Edward Joseph Senior and his wife Jane (nee Farrell) travelled to South Africa with James as a baby as it was quite common at that time for miners to go searching for gold.
Eddie was one of eight siblings - Tommy (1921-1983), Kathleen (1924-2019), Peter (1926 and living in Australia), Philomena (1931-2022) and James (1936-2020), (2 other children died as babies). James, Elizabeth and their young family lived on Robert Owen Avenue
After moving the Northamptonshire in 1937 During the war the JAmes Burns and family moved once again to Pendleton , Manchester
Buried or Commemorated at
Reichswald Forest War Cemetery
Germany
Grave Position: 35. B. 7.
Private Memorial: Cleator Moor Roll of honour
ST Marys RC Church WW 2 Scroll
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