Gestapo Hunter

The Remarkable Wartime Career of Mosquito Navigator Ted Sismore

Sean Feast

£25.00

Gestapo Hunter explores the charmed life and exceptional career of Ted Sismore, widely considered one of the RAF’s very best wartime navigators and leaders. A quiet, unassuming man who was nicknamed ‘Daisy’ on account of his youthful complexion, Ted was one of only a handful of aircrew to complete a tour of operations in Blenheims in the summer of 1941.

Format: Hardback
Extent: 208 pages
Dimensions: 234 x 156 mm
ISBN: 9781911714118.
Categories: , , .
Publication Date: 30 September 2024

Gestapo Hunter explores the charmed life and exceptional career of Ted Sismore, widely considered one of the RAF’s very best wartime navigators and leaders. A quiet, unassuming man who was nicknamed ‘Daisy’ on account of his youthful complexion, Ted was one of only a handful of aircrew to complete a tour of operations in Blenheims in the summer of 1941.

He is best remembered, however, for his long association with the Mosquito. Planning and leading some of the Mossie’s most famous raids against the Nazi regime’s most-loathed characters. He flew in the daylight attack on Berlin, timed to coincide with an address being given by Hermann Göring, for which he received the first of several awards for gallantry and which was widely publicised. This was followed by a range of attacks which demonstrated the Mosquito’s range and marked the aircraft out for further special duties.

Identified by Basil Embry, the mercurial AOC of 2 Group, as something of a kindred spirit, Ted joined the Group’s HQ staff, planning Operation Jericho, the famous attack on Amiens prison on February 18, 1944. He then took part in further attacks aimed at disrupting Gestapo activities including the bombing of their HQ at Odense.

After the war, Ted teamed up with Mick Martin, the famous Dambuster, to break the flying record from London to Cape Town, in 1947, a journey of almost 7,000 miles. He later qualified as a pilot, flying Meteors, Javelins and Canberras, retiring as an air commodore. He died in 2012.

As far as he was able Sean Feast used Ted’s own words throughout the book. The result is a fascinating insight into the life of an extraordinary man.

Sean Feast

Sean Feast started a career in journalism in 1985, concurrently training at the London College of Printing and later joining Maxwell Business Communications. In 1991 he joined the then fledgling advertising agency, AGA, to start its PR business, AGA Pu …

Continue Reading


Additional information

Weight 580 g
Dimensions 234 × 156 × 32 mm

1 review for Gestapo Hunter

  1. Aviation News (November 2024)

    “A well-told tale of a full and active life.”

Add a review

You may also like…

  • Stanford Tuck

    Helen Doe

    The first full reappraisal of one of Britain’s great fighter aces, this book examines the truth behind Tuck’s 1956 biography, Fly for Your Life. It looks at the evidence behind the myths, checks out some of the exaggerated stories and reveals the real Stanford Tuck.

    Stanford Tuck is a neglected hero of the British narrative of the Second World War despite his success as a fighter ace in the critical years. Helen Doe has successfully rescued Tuck as an airman worth knowing better, and at the same time has removed the many myths and distortions that earlier accounts accumulated. This is no hagiography, but a thoroughly researched biography that presents the many sides of Tuck’s personality and career with candour but also with sympathy.
    Professor Richard Overy

    Scrupulously researched, this book tells the story of the human being behind the hero, bringing home the true tragedy and suffering of war. It makes for a compelling read.
    Stephen Bungay

    “This is an acute memoir of refreshing clarity written with sympathy and elan.”
    Britain at War, Book of the Month (January 2024)

    “An impeccably researched and highly readable account, and one very fair in its reasoning and assessments. Excellent.”
    Aeroplane

    £25.00
    read more >
  • Halton Boys

    Sean Feast

    This is the story of Halton told through and by the boys who were there and who are still proud to be called ‘Trenchard Brats’.

    £25.00
    read more >
  • From Spitfires to Vampires and Beyond

    Owen Hardy

    Edited by Air Marshal G.A. 'Black' Robertson

    World War Two Spitfire pilot Owen Hardy was probably the last New Zealand ace to tell his story. He left home at 18 bent on joining the RAF and by 1942, aged only 20, he was at Biggin Hill with 72 Squadron under Brian Kingcome. D-Day found him flying over the Normandy beaches with 485 (New Zealand) Squadron. That he survived the war unharmed owed as much to luck as it did to his ability as a fighter pilot. Unable, though, to settle in civilian life afterwards in New Zealand, he returned to the RAF for the second phase of a remarkable career.

    £25.00
    read more >