After his successful run illustrating a full colour double-page spread on
Field Marshall Montgomery in Eagle, Bellamy created 6 single black and white
page stories in the Eagle series "Only the brave". His episodes ran
from Eagle volume 13:33 to 13:38 with dates 18th August 1962 to 22nd September
1962.
Background to the series: Only
the brave told the true life stories of recipients of the George Medal
(as opposed to the George Cross) and the British Empire Medal. Wikipedia has an excellent
article on the George Medal which was "instituted on 24 September 1940
by King George VI". I re-read the stories for this blog and was amazed how
moving they are after all these years and how Bellamy managed to fit excitement
and pathos in the series taking only one page! Bellamy illustrated part of the
covers of the 2 Eagles in which he did his forst 2 black & white pages. The
cover at that time was divided up in illustrative panels. For the curious, this
is directly before the Eagle decided to create single image covers of racing
drivers "Kings of the road". The name is not to confused with the
exciting Gerry Haylock drawn series - but I digress!)
Which names are covered by Eagle?
No. 24 Flt Sgt John Goldsmith I
February 1941 Flight Sergeant John Goldsmith was driving his ambulance when he
spotted a plane in difficulty. He sprang to the rescue of the pilot stuck in the
wreckage despite the danger of a likely fuel tank explosion
| Click to enlarge Bellamy panel | Click to enlarge page - 4.7Mb |
No. 25 John Edwards John Edwards, a
bank manager in Birmingham, stopped a robbery in his bank, facing up to two
masked men. "After the gunmen had stood
trail the judge left his bench to congratulate Mr. Edwards"
No. 26 Lilan Daka in 1958, a Ngomi
tribesman in Northern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) rushes headlong into a hut where a
woman is screaming, as a lion heads towards her baby. He forgets that he has not
loaded his rifle yet fights the lion bear-handed
No. 27 Malcolm Bignall In June 1957
Bignall drove a 50 ton transporter (with a tank on board) for the Royal Army
Service Corp through the towns and villages of Hampshire. The brakes failed on a
hill and he was heading for Hurstbourne Tarrant where villagers were unaware
what was coming. Despite personally being injured as the transporter's flywheel
hit him he managed to steer the transporter and tank into a nearby field and was
awarded a British Empire Medal
No. 28 PC Verth of Manchester P.C.
Archibald Verth of Manchester stops a robbery in a gunsmiths and is awarded a
BEM. (see the Third
Supplement the the London Gazette Fri 23rd May 1958 for further details - or
read the Eagle!)
No. 29 PC Tom Young P.C. Tom Young
hangs onto a car when he discovers a petrol thief. He's taken for a ride on the
bonnet and travels at 70 miles per hour (could cars go that fast before 1962?)
Eventually the car runs out of petrol and Young chases the criminal. Later he
too is awarded the British Empire Medal
REPRINTS
For further details on where these strips have been reprinted - to my knowledge
- see the link
to the reprint list
You are in a pop-up note on FrankBellamy.co.uk