Jeg møtte Nils Christensen på Andøya i 2012. Jeg snakket med ham og vi fant fort ut at vi var fra nesten samme plassen; han fra Høvik og jeg fra Blommenholm i Bærum. I Christensenhuset, i Glassverkveien tror jeg at min klassekamerat Truls Jacobsen, bor nå. Hen er en slektning av Nils. Veritas holder til like ved, for de som er lokalkjente. I 2012 skrev jeg om Nils på bloggen bl.a. fordi Viking Air overtok agenturet for flere av DH Canadas fly. De bygget sågar en egen utgave av Twin Otter.
Nils Christensens historie er fantastisk. Såvidt jeg vet er han eneste nordmann i Canadian Aviation Hall of Fame. Det er også pussig at han bodde i Abbotsford, litt øst av Vancouver. Der var jeg på flyshow en gang da B-2 skulle vise seg utenlands for første gang. På samme flyplass var brannfly stasjonert, bl.a. en ex Braathens DC-6B.
Her et bilde jeg tok av Nils i 2012 - Still going strong! Sjekk video her: https://tinyurl.com/ydcbdz5j
Marit, hans yngste datter, skriver til meg:
Hello Per,
I hope you don't mind
that this email is in English.
I am the daughter of
Nils Christensen, whom you have written about in your blog. I only found your
blog when a friend of mine discovered it and sent me the link today. Thank you
for the kind things you have written about my father.
If you are interested in
learning a bit more about Nils Christensen, I have attached to this email a
copy of the speech I gave at his Celebration of Life last year. The speech
contains an outline of what his life was like. If you have any questions,
please feel free to contact me.
God Jul,
Marit Christensen
Thank you all for
coming.
There is no one who would have enjoyed this gathering more than Nils
himself. Sharing a drink with friends and family was undoubtedly his favourite
thing to do. On behalf of the family, I would like to thank the John and
Eleanor at the BC Aviation Museum for allowing us this space, Dave and Amber at
Viking Air for contributing greatly to this Celebration, and to all of you who
travelled to be here today. We feel truly honoured to have Brigadier General
Tom Guttormsen, from Norway here, and Consul Steinar Engeset, from Halifax.
We miss Nils and
we grieve for him, but today we are here to celebrate Nils’ life and I would
like to begin with a brief outline of what his life was like. If there are any
inaccuracies in the following, I apologize in advance. Most of this is based on
recollections.
Nils came into
this world on a summer’s day in August, 1921. He left this world on a summer’s
day in August, 2017, just 9 days short of his 96th birthday.
Nils was born at
home in Høvik, Norway. The house he was born in, built in the 1890’s, has
always been and still is, lived in by our family. He was the last surviving
member of the six children in his family.
When Nils was 5,
he remembers being in the yard when an enormous airship glided overhead. What
he saw that day was the semi-rigid airship “Norge” manned by Roald Amundsen and
General Umberto Nobile, on their way to the North Pole and eventually Alaska,
in a quest to fill in an uncharted patch of the world map. Many years later he
learned that one of his commanding officers in the Norwegian Air Force, Hjalmar
Riiser-Larsen, was on board the Norge that day when it flew over him.
Oh, the
early days of aviation!
From an early age,
Nils learned that there was work to be done, just to survive. As a boy, he
worked at a market garden, and raised rabbits for food. There were 11 people
living in the house at one time, from a newborn to an 85-year-old, and it
wasn’t a large house. His mother had a makeshift store in the house and sold
candy, chocolates, soft drinks and beer. His father was an insurance collector.
Nils received the
standard education in Norway at that time, which was 7 years of primary school.
He was finished when he was 14 and from there he attended trade school for
experience in blacksmithing, machining and welding. He also enrolled in evening
classes at a technical school, where he learned mechanical theory and
drafting. He had a part time job at a
Ford dealership, which is interesting, because he was a loyal GM man most of
his life.
When Nils was 18,
he started looking for steady work, using his new skills, but couldn’t find
anything. He tried signing on for whaling, but no luck. Finally, he found a
ship that would take him, but when he told his mother that it was carrying
dynamite, she put an end to that. Using a connection she had with a former
employer, his mother got him hired on with the Wilhelmsen Shipping Co. Nils was
only paid about $10 a month, but he was promised four times that amount if they
were in a war zone. World War II started in September, 1939, and he went to sea
in November.
During his time on
merchant ships in the war, Nils travelled extensively carrying goods and
supplies across sometimes dangerous waters. He went to Portugal; the Panama Canal; California;
Yokohama, Japan; Shanghai, China; Hong Kong; the Philippines; New York, Borneo,
Singapore, Dutch East Indies, Java, Sumatra, Papua New Guinea, Australia,
Hawaii, and Rio, Brazil, just to name a few. He continued to sail even after
Norway was occupied by the Germans, and Norwegian ships were no longer
considered neutral.
The Merchant Navy
generated the income needed to support Norway’s military effort and not only
enabled Norway to cover all their own costs during the war, but also allowed
the country to meet all foreign obligations. For a country under occupation
with an exiled government, this feat must be considered as nothing less than
astounding. Prime Minister Winston Churchill is quoted as saying “The Norwegian
merchant navy was worth an army of one million men from 1940 to 1945”.
Little Norway
When Nils signed
off his last ship in New York, he reported to the Norwegian Consulate, and was
enlisted in the Norwegian Air Force in April, 1942. He was 20 years old.
Nils was sent to
Toronto to Little Norway, where the Norwegians had set up a training camp,
flying out of the Toronto Island Airport and later the Muskoka Airport. It was
decided that Nils would be most useful as an aircraft mechanic, and the course
of the rest of his life was set in motion.
In the spring of
1943, Nils boarded the turbine steam ship Louis Pasteur in Halifax, and sailed
to Liverpool. He was posted to 333 Squadron, a Norwegian Squadron under the
R.A.F., formed on May 10, 1943 with bases in Leuchars and Woodhaven in
Scotland. Nils was stationed at Leuchars as a Flight Mechanic on the Mosquitos.
In August, 1944, he attended gunnery school and was trained on Anson Mark I’s
and Catalinas. He was then sent to Woodhaven and the Sumburgh Head, Shetland
Islands, as Flight Mechanic/Air Gunner, flying anti-submarine patrols to the
north of Scotland.
The Peace
One of the most
memorable events in Nils’ life, was when he was part of a crew chosen to fly
the Peace Commission to Norway to accept the German surrender and liberate his
country. Nils had not seen his homeland for over 5 years.
On May 7, 1945,
the Peace Commissionaires were onboard a Catalina and Sunderland, as they
approached Oslo, firing off flares to identify themselves. The city was still
under German control and the anti-aircraft guns had their sights set. As they
flew over the city, on a beautiful sunny day, Nils could see masses of people in
the streets, waving Norwegian flags and cheering on the planes. The crews were
loaded onto a German bus, with a German driver and the air was electric with
apprehension and anticipation. As they rode through the streets to German
Headquarters, the excitement built, and soon people were swarming the bus,
wanting to shake their hands or to talk to them. It was overwhelming. Nils and
others climbed to the top of the bus, took off their hats and started singing
the Norwegian national anthem. It was very emotional. We have a photo (over
there) of Nils on top of that bus.
Once the surrender
had been signed, Nils was finally allowed home to see his family. His mother
hadn’t heard from him in so long, that she thought he must surely be dead, and
she couldn’t believe it when he came home. He had changed a lot from the 18-year-old
boy she had last known. He only had a short visit though, before heading back
to Woodhaven.
When Nils was
finally allowed home to Norway permanently, he was given guard duty of German
prisoners organized into work parties. German planes and crews were used to
transfer supplies from Oslo to Stavanger. Flying in a German-built Dornier 23
flying boat was quite an experience, he said.
Nils was then
chosen to crew on an aircraft flying Crown Prince Olav around the country to
survey the war damage. He said the Crown Prince was wonderfully unassuming and
just like one of the guys.
Next he was flying
mine patrols…..and keeping an eye out for herring runs for the local fishermen!
Post war
After the war, 333
Squadron became part of the Royal Norwegian Air Force and was moved to
Stavanger, Norway, and Woodhaven, Scotland, went back to being a yacht club.
The Christmas of
1945 was Nils’ first Christmas with his family in 7 years.
Nils stayed on
with the RNoAF for another year after the war, to gain further experience, and
trained at the School of Aeronautical Engineering at the RAF base in
Bedfordshire, England. On completion, he was qualified to work on any aircraft
operated by the RAF.
It was near here
that Nils met Sheila for the first time at a church fair (or fete, as they
would say) and they began seeing each other on weekends. He was 25, she was 19.
This was the beginning of a 70-year love story.
Nils eventually returned
to Norway, where he was a Technical Sergeant overseeing repairs on Fairchilds,
Spitfires, Lockheeds and DC-3’s.
He asked Sheila to
come visit Norway for Christmas in 1946, but the Air Ministry where she worked
wouldn’t let her go, so she had to trick them, by saying she was getting
married, which was the only way to force them to release her from her job.
During that Christmas visit, they did decide to get married, so it wasn’t a
total deception. Sheila waited until her 20th birthday in February to
tell her family. Until you were 21, you needed your parents’ permission to marry,
but her father, Wing Commander William Wolfenden, O.B.E. liked Nils because he
was in the air force, and his wife, Ethel, liked Nils for his manners, so they
agreed to the marriage.
Back to Høvik
On May 3, 1947,
Sheila left England for good, and started her new life with Nils. They were
married on May 31, 1947 in Norway and moved into the Christensen family home.
Although Sheila could understand a lot of Norwegian by then, she couldn’t yet
speak it. It must have been interesting!
Nils left the forces
in October, 1947, and obtained his Aircraft Mechanic’s License. He had to pass
an oral examination. There was no written test. Men with his skills were very
much in demand, and he took a job with Braathens S.A.F.E. (South America and
Far East) Transport. Braathens ran scheduled flights on DC-4s to Hong Kong and
other destinations, to service huge oil tankers owned by Ludwig Braathen. Nils
flew on some of the charter flights as a mechanic to Egypt, Palestine, Iran,
Italy and Switzerland.
Nils and Sheila
were sent to Amsterdam for six months, then returned to Norway where Nils
worked at the Braathen headquarters in Oslo. In 1948 Nils was sent back to
Amsterdam as Base Engineer at Schiphol Airport, which was the hub for travel
around Europe, especially due to the Berlin Airlift.
In 1950, Nils and
Sheila had their first daughter, Randi, born in Amsterdam.
When Braathens
moved its maintenance base back to Norway, where the couple couldn’t find
housing, they started looking for somewhere else to go. At that time, Canada
was advertising for workers for the DEW (Distant Early Warning) Line, and because
Nils had been to Canada before and liked it, he applied for immigration. In
August, 1951, he was approved and the family moved to Toronto.
Canada
Four employers
were suggested to Nils: Air Canada, Avro Air, Sanderson and de Havilland. He
felt mocked by the interviewer at Sanderson, who held out an adjustable wrench
and asked Dad sarcastically if he knew what it was. He didn’t like that you
didn’t need a licence to work at Air Canada, and that they would only have him
working on limited parts of the planes, like hydraulic systems. Avro had
defence contracts, and it would take too long to get him approved, so he chose
de Havilland, where he was working on Lancaster and Halifax bombers being
converted to air/sea rescue planes. The hiring rate of pay was $1/hour, or
$1.25/hour if you had your own tools (which he did!).
Just over a year
later, Nils took at job at Sault Airways in Sault Ste. Marie working with Keith
Messenger, as Chief of Maintenance on the Norseman, Fox Moth, Seebee, Stinson,
Cessna and other bush planes. He studied and wrote his Canadian Aircraft
Engineers written exam (in English) and was finally accredited in Canada.
During this time, Nils developed rheumatic fever, and was unable to work for
six months. Sheila was pregnant with a 3-year-old at home. During these
frightful months, Keith Messenger continued to pay Nils a partial salary,
allowing the family to survive. Nils never forgot Keith’s kindness and was
determined to pass it on. He wanted to give other young men the opportunity to
learn a good trade in aviation and succeed, and that’s what he did.
In October, 1953,
Nils and Sheila welcomed their son, Erik, into their lives. Times were tough
then and the family was barely getting by. Nils even went door to door selling
eggs for extra money.
In 1956, Nils
started looking for a new challenge, and sent out 7 applications. He was
disappointed when he didn’t hear anything back for a few days, but then, within
a space of 2 days, came 7 telegrams saying “come join us”. Job offers came from
the government, Okanagan Helicopters, a Quebec air survey company, Victoria
Flying Club, and even one from Ward Air, signed by Max Ward himself.
A friend had been
stationed at Pat Bay during the war, and said it was lovely there, so Nils took
the job as Director of Maintenance at the Victoria Flying Club, looking after
Canucks, Cessnas and Pipers.
The family arrived
in a Northstar to Vancouver on March 29, 1956. Sault Ste. Marie had been a
landscape of black, bare tree limbs, and white ice and snow for months, but
when they stepped off the plane in Vancouver, Sheila said it was like the
Wizard of Oz movie where it suddenly turns from black and white to colour. Blue
skies, sunshine, green grass and flowers. “It took our breath away” she said.
Flying Boats
After a year of
correspondence courses on Canadian history, and a lengthy written exam, Nils
became a Canadian citizen in 1957.
In 1957 they made
a big investment, and bought the house on East Saanich, on 2/3 of an acre, for
$4000. They couldn’t afford waterfront, which was going for around $10,000.
He then took a job
with Fairey Aviation converting Martin Mars aircraft to water bombers and then
with Forest Industries Flying Tankers, as Chief Engineer on the Mars water
bombers.
Sheila and Nils’
second daughter, Marit, was born in 1960.
At this time Nils
was spending much of the year at Sproat Lake, flying missions to combat fires
all over BC. His life was spared, when he was ordered not to go on the fatal
flight in 1961 when the Mars crashed, and four of his good friends and
co-workers perished.
Nils eventually
left Flying Tankers and became the Manager of McKinnon Enterprises at the
Victoria Airport, doing repairs and conversions on the Grumman Goose and
Widgeons.
Viking Air established
In 1970, when
McKinnon had closed down, Nils and Sheila started their own company, Viking Air
Ltd. “Wiking Air”
Viking Air did
overhaul and maintenance on all types of aircraft, but specialized in the
flying boats. Meanwhile, Nils had an eye on de Havilland, and petitioned his
old company for years, trying to get the parts manufacturing rights and Type
Certificates for several of their aircraft. He was successful in obtaining the
parts manufacturing rights for the Beaver, Otter and Turbo Beaver.
The early years of
Viking Air were adventuresome. Nils would get a call from a crashed or stranded
airplane, somewhere in Canada, the US, or Alaska, and he’d pack up his tool box
and off he’d go. He’d patch up planes, and then insist on riding in them on
their way to Viking for repairs. He took his life in his own hands so many
times on those crazy flights. Nils’ reputation with the flying boats spread
quickly, and soon he was being contacted by countries around the world for
parts and information.
Nils sold his
company in 1987 and eventually Dave Curtis became the new face of Viking Air.
Nils’ work with de Havilland and Bombardier paid off when Viking was finally
awarded Type Certificates to seven aircraft, including the Twin Otter, Beaver
and Dash 7. Dave and Viking Air haven’t looked back since, and under the
guidance of the team at Viking, it has grown into a national aircraft
manufacturer, employing 100’s of people, soaring far beyond Nils’ expectations.
Hall of Fame
After retiring,
Nils stayed active in any aircraft project anyone approached him with. He was a
founding member of the BC Aviation Museum, and has contributed greatly. He has
received many awards, the most prestigious being his induction into the
Canadian Aviation Hall of Fame.
Nils spent his
retirement years in a lovely home on Salt Spring Island, where he became a
beloved member of the community. He volunteered with the Legion, he fixed pot holes
in our road, raised money for lights for the school busses, cheered on the
local dragon boat team and was known as an island personality.
He travelled back
to Norway twice in the past few years. Once to attend a reunion of 333 Squadron
in Andoya, high up in the Arctic Circle, and once to attend a dedication of a
merchant ship, D/S Hestmanden, where he dined with the King of Norway, and even had a chance to
tell the King that they had met before, when the King was only a boy.
Nils, Sheila and I
moved to Abbotsford in March this year, to get away from tedious ferry rides,
and to be closer to family. Nils enjoyed his new home, and had plans for several
projects to keep him occupied this winter. We never expected him to go so
quickly, but we are grateful that it was quick.
Norway was always
home to Nils, and his ashes will be buried there in a family plot near his
childhood home.
Nils was an
aircraft pioneer, a renaissance man, a family man, a loving father and a
devoted husband to Sheila. He lived a life well lived, and will always be
carried in our hearts. Thank you.
Thank you.
Speakers: Brig.
Gen. Tom Guttormsen, Consul Steinar Engeset, Dave Curtis, John Latta, Kelly
Wilk and Mike Ingram.
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