Become a Member
News

Captain Martin Maxwell

Last of the two known surviving British Jewish wartime glider pilots

January 15, 2021 15:21
Captain Martin Maxwell credit twiiter Cv32eRlWIAYC_AK
2 min read

He was just 15 when he and his brother left Vienna for England in 1938 on the Kindertransport, having lost both parents. Martin Maxwell, who was adopted by the Webber family in Manchester, reflected: “Had it not been for a letter my brother had received from a sympathetic Nazi officer, I was almost certainly destined for a concentration camp”. Both had witnessed Kristallnacht in Vienna as boys. 

His three sisters were sent to Paris in 1939. Only the youngest survived the war, having been taken in by a Christian family. The two elder girls perished in the camps. 

Maxwell, who has died aged 97, could barely wait to fight for the liberation of Europe, and In 1941, aged 18, he joined the British army. As an “alien” he was placed into the Pioneer Corps and was finally transferred to the Tank Regiment. He then volunteered for special forces in the Army Air Corps as a glider pilot. After intense training, including parachute jumps, Maxwell earned his red beret as an airborne regiment glider pilot and was involved in the D Day landings on June 6 1944; he was just 21 years old.