![]() ![]() heir father had been a Sinhalese who arrived in Malaya from Ceylon with just about the shirt on his back and a few cents in his pocket. A shining example of the Malayan rags-to-riches story, Hewage (pronounced He-wa-ge) Benjamin Talalla rose to become a successful and respected businessman in early twentieth century Kuala Lumpur. With early Kuala Lumpur pioneers like Yap Tai Chi and Loke Chow Thye, he sat on the Kuala Lumpur Sanitary Board which provided public services like water, light, town cleansing and roads. The Board was the colonial precursor of the K.L. Town Hall, the Municipality and, of course, much later, City Hall. He built up a sanitary hardware business and his company, Fletcher Trading Company Ltd. of Old Market Square, was instrumental in introducing modern sanitation to Kuala Lumpur. Hewage was a founder member, too, of the first Rotary Club. He had his fingers on the pulse of the town, rubbing shoulders with the leading lights of Kuala Lumpur and the colonial administration. He was a guest, for instance, along with no less than the British Resident at the old High Street V.I. when poet Rabindranath Tagore visited the school in 1929 to give a talk and some readings of his works. Hewage even learned to fly, an exotic skill in an era when the mere appearance of a plane in the Malayan skies was enough to attract great attention. As if that was not enough, in a headline-making flight in 1932, he flew solo from Alor Star to Croydon, England. His epic 28-day flight was the modern equivalent of going to the moon. On his return Hewage was lionized and invited as a speaker to many functions. Two roads, one in Klang and the other parallel to Birch Road (now Jalan Maharajalela), are named in his honour. (The KL road is misspelled Jalan Ta'ala in some current maps.) ![]() Hewage married Lily Olga Fernando and had seven children, six boys and a girl. The daughter did not survive infancy; the sons were educated at either the V.I. or, as second choice, the St Johns Institution. So when Henry Conrad Benjamin Talalla and Cyril Lionel Francis Talalla - the two oldest sons - came along, their father's choice of school was obvious. As a child Henry had been nicknamed Sonny, the first part of the moniker
"Sonny Jim". Cyril, a year younger, thus became Jimmy in turn. Henry went to the V.I. from
1933 to 1937 and Cyril from 1934 to 1938. Both were active as cadets and as sportsmen,
with Henry representing Shaw House in cricket while Cyril played hockey for Hepponstall
House and the school as well. Both brothers were House Prefects, one category lower
than school prefects. They were the only pupils to drive to
It was quite natural for Henry and Cyril, who looked upon their father with an element of awe, to evince an interest in flying. Their cousin, Hector Talalla, ten years older than Henry and also a Victorian, had been the first in their generation to join the Kuala Lumpur Flying Club. Henry and Cyril followed suit and were soon buzzing over Kuala Lumpur in Tiger Moth biplanes. By the time they left the V.I. each had obtained his pilot "A" license. Henry proceeded to London after his School Certificate to study for his London matriculation with a view to proceeding to St Bartholomew's to study medicine. However he wasn't very successful. On returning home, he and Jimmy, who had just finished at the V.I., joined their father's company where, on their father's orders, the Fletcher staff were told to treat them exactly as anyone else. The boys were each paid 15 dollars a month. They were there less a year when fate beckoned in September 1939. Britain had declared war against Germany. Like in all families in those days, Talalla senior was very much the patriarch and, when the call for pilots went out to countries in the British Empire, he simply told Henry and Cyril that he would like them to join the Royal Air Force. The lads took it as a direction from their father and simply complied. In 1940 the two brothers trained in Singapore under the Malayan Volunteer Air Force. The Malay Mail reported proudly in January 1941 that Cyril was first Asian to pass the rigid RAF entrance tests and to enrol as a cadet at the government flying school. It neglected ![]() The diminutive Henry had failed to measure up in the physical and had to spend another six months back in Malaya building up his weight and strength before he was finally accepted. When that finally came, Henry made a farewell flight over Kuala Lumpur. On a challenge from his brother Andrew the future RAF pilot performed some daredevil acrobatics, diving low over the compound of their neighbouring doctor (Dr Narunha) and earning a severe reprimand from his father later. The following day he turned up late for his departure from the old K.L. airport in Sungei Besi Road because he had been busy saying farewells all round. As he took the last seat, just over the rear wheel of the early model DC-3, it was the last time the Talalla family would see him again. Henry flew to Singapore first, and from there, like Cyril before him,
took a round-about route to the Empire Flying School in Alberta, Canada. On completing
his course he received his commission as a sergeant pilot and was retained as a
staff pilot at an air navigation school. After a stint with the Hurricane
Cyril had by that time also been trained on Hurricanes and had been a staff pilot at the Hurricane Operational Training Unit until May 1942 when he was posted to No. 118 Squadron, which was equipped with Supermarine Spitfires. Cyril's first kill was reported in a British newspaper (the lack of a Malayan identity is painfully obvious): A Sinhalese pilot, the first to fly with his fighter command scored his opening victory a few days ago. He is pilot officer Talalla. His section of the Spitfires was over the Dutch coast when two Focker Wulf 190s were sighted 100 feet above the water. Talalla saw that one had damaged a colleague's wing, so he dived down behind the Focker Wulf. "My fire burst sent pieces flying off it", he said. "There was an explosion in the cockpit and the enemy dived into the sea with an orange flash." A second Focker Wulf was damaged. Cyril saw active service in Spitfires over England, the English Channel,
the North Sea and German-occupied Europe, making fighter sweeps and providing escort for
1,000-bomber raids. In June 1943, Cyril was awarded the Distinguished
The two lads' bravery and valour were hardly known to their family back in Malaya, who were having their own troubles. For, by late 1941, war had come to Malaya and there was a three-and-a-half-year blackout of news about their sons. In the chaos and destruction wrought by the Japanese invasion and occupation, Hewage took the initiative in reestablishing a system for collecting garbage and sewage for Kuala Lumpur. Then he, his wife and remaining sons were arrested on 15th October 1943 following the Double Tenth sabotage in Singapore Harbour when a number of Japanese ships were blown up in an operation directed from Perth. Talalla Senior and his wife were tortured on trumped-up charges of espionage. ![]() On D-Day, 6th June, 1944, both Henry and Cyril played an integral part in providing fighter support for Allied bomber, ground and naval forces in the invasion of Nazi-occupied France. By the end of June, the Normandy beach head in France was wide and secure enough for Henry's squadron to use a forward base near the French town of Coulomb. On 18th July, the Allies launched Operation Goodwood against the Germans. Following intensive aerial bombardment, the Americans attacked on the western front forcing the Germans to withdraw to the west of St-Lô. Supporting these operations, the 2nd British Army and the 1st Canadian Army on the eastern front
line attacked in the direction of Falaise, south of Caen. By this time, the Germans were shifting their Panzer Divisions towards the British forward line, and a week later, there were three times more German tanks facing the British than in the American sector. They had also over one hundred of the formidable 8.8 cm anti-aircraft guns putting up a barrage of steel in a desperate bid to halt the deadly aerial attacks by 1,600 Allied four-engined bombers and 600 two-engined bombers and fighter-bombers. This desperate German defence in the first fifty days after D-Day had already cost the British 6,000 killed. Soon it would claim an ex-Victorian as well. At 11:45 a.m. on 25th July, Henry's Typhoon was one of four planes attacking German panzers at Fontenay-le-Marmion, six miles south of Caen. Henry was then flying third in line, and usually it was the fourth plane that took the brunt of enemy fire when German guns finally homed in on the attackers. This time it turned out that intense anti-aircraft fire had found Henry while the pilot flying behind him
was spared. His Typhoon was observed heading northeast and was not seen by his comrades again. Henry went down over farmland ten miles southeast of Caen between the towns of Airan and Moult, in farmer Louis Brée's field which was under grass at that time. At that time all French civilians had been evacuated by the Germans from the area and were not allowed to return to their homes until 15th August. Brée returned to find the wreckage of the Typhoon on his property and a fresh grave beside it. His assumption was that the pilot had been buried by the German SS, for when he returned to his farm the SS were the only people still around. In truth Henry had been discovered and buried on the spot by members of the French Maquis, the Resistance movement.
Cyril had by 1944 been serving with No 122 Squadron as Flight
Commander, flying a different kind of plane, the American P-51 Mustang. When he
heard the news about his brother, he obtained permission to fly over the area to
search for Henry's Typhoon. But it was a near impossible task scouring a mangled,
smoking landscape strewn with the detritus of war. With a heavy heart he had to
call off the search for his brother. Soon after the air-borne operations at Arnheim,
Cyril's squadron was recalled to England to provide fighter escort for the heavy
bombers in their pulverisation of the Third Reich. By Christmas Eve 1944, Cyril
had completed his 250th and last sortie over enemy territory. He stood down from
operational duties and spent the rest of the war as a flying instructor. With
It was only when the Japanese forces in Malaya surrendered in September 1945, that the devastating news of Henry's loss finally reached the surviving Talallas, though the RAF at that time had no inkling of where he or his plane was. This was not good enough for a grieving Hewage who immediately travelled to London to demand some action by the British Government. He was put in touch with the French authorities who were very cooperative and appreciative of anyone who had come to the aid of France against the Germans. Talalla Senior tracked down Louis Brée with the help of two local policemen in Argences and succeeded in locating Henry's Typhoon in the spot where it had come down. Hewage removed the part of the fuselage with the serial number on it and shipped it back to Malaya. Henry's remains were exhumed a year or two later and reburied at the Banneville-la-Campagne British Cemetery. A marble and concrete marker was erected in Louis Brée's farm in a small copse of trees beside a field of corn. In recent years it was moved closer to the original crash site by the side of the field so that it is visible from the road. Cyril returned to Malaya in October 1945 a flight lieutenant. He had been
In 1949, the V.I. paid tribute to its war dead. A war memorial
with the names of fallen masters and pupils of both world wars, including
Henry's, was unveiled in the school library on 17th March by Mr Anthony
On his return to civilian life, Cyril formally changed his name by deed poll to Jimmy and joined the Department of Civil Aviation as an air traffic controller, and later worked in his father's firm. At the end of 1953, he was made the Commandant of the Federation of Malaya Air Training Corps which was comprised of cadets from his alma mater and other schools. Jimmy next joined the Federation Air Services (which was the fore-runner of the Royal Malaysian Air Force) and flew Beavers, ferrying personages like Tunku Abdul Rahman (Malaysia's first Prime Minister) and cabinet ministers Leong Yew Koh and Sardon Haji Zubir around the country. The Tunku got to know Jimmy personally and would always ask to be flown by him. Jimmy then flew for Malayan Airways and later became its Kuala Lumpur Manager. He resigned from the position in 1963, retired to Llangerdeine in Wales and opened a pub, where he was a popular figure. He passed away on 18th August 1973. In 1994, on the fiftieth anniversary of D-Day, members of the Talalla family and Henry's former Typhoon comrades converged from all over the world and met with the Brée family at Airan to pay homage to the fallen airman. Fifty years on, the sacrifice of Henry was still not forgotten by the grateful people of the two French towns between which he fell. The local church at Airan was packed with locals attending a special service in honour of Henry. Similar services were held in almost every Normandy village in memory of their own adopted "heroes". The Talalla family paid their respects at Henry's grave where the epitaph - selected by his mother a half century ago - read: "Father in Thy gracious keeping, Leave We now Thy servant Sleeping." There is a Typhoon Memorial at Noyers Bocage which commemmorates the 151 Typhoon pilots, including Henry, who lost their lives in the Normandy campaign. (In all, 660 Typhoon pilots and approximate 12 ground crew lost their lives in the Second World War.) On September 29, 1996, the mayors of Airan and Moult unveiled a sign officially naming the route between the two villages, Route Henry Talalla. His memory was now forever stamped in this little corner of France.
Today the two families - the Brées and the Talallas - vigorously maintain the very special relationship started by Louis and Hewage. For half a century, they have corresponded and exchanged cordialities, and even after the passing of their respective patriarchs, their descendants continue to reach out to each other. The third generation of Brées and Talallas now carry the torch. A lasting bond, across time and across nations, now links two disparate families united in common homage to the brave young man from the Victoria Institution who had come to help liberate France. ![]() To you from failing hands we throw The torch Be yours to hold it high If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep. Inscribed on the V.I. War memorial ![]() Malaya WW2 Typhoon pilot story
Photos below by Chung Chee Min
E P I L O G U E The following email was received on October 21, 2006: I have just found your contribution to The V.I. Web Page entitled The Talalla Brothers. I served with Jimmy [Cyril] on No 122 Squadron R.A.F throughout the Normandy campaign. Jimmy and I joined 122 Squadron on the same day and finished our tour about the same time, Jimmy flew his last operation on 24th Dec 1944, in fact he was to have led the Squadron on Christmas Day but his aircraft would not start. As a result I led the squadron on what was a fighter sweep. I flew my last operation on 1st January 1945 and we left the squadron together a couple of days later. I deeply regret that despite the fact that we had been very close mates throughout our tour we were never able to meet up again. About 1975, my youngest son spent time in Malaysia and made enquiries about Jimmy on my behalf but was unsuccessful, now obviously evident that was because he was deceased. Just recently one of my grandsons was showing me how to search the web and I asked him to try finding 122 Squadron. To my delight he also came up with your wonderful contribution. Congratulations on a great effort. Although sad to learn that Jimmy is no longer with us, it has stirred wonderful memories of our friendship. If you have had any response from other pilots who served with us on 122 Squadron, I would be most apprciative of receiving their contact addresses. Thank you for what you have done. "Snow" Davis * * * * * * * * * * Thank you for your rapid response to my email. It is raining here today so I am trying to get through the frustrations and master something on my computer. A new chapter has opened - what a difference a [wet] day can make. After sixty years of not wanting to remember the war a chance personal advertisement in Sydney paper made me get out my old logbook, photos fell out and soon I was hooked, now Jimmy Talalla is back to haunt me. Since my email this morning memories have flowed back When Jimmy and I finished our tour we were both "tired" - mentally and physically which was why we were "rested". I had one thing in mind to get married and this I did as soon as formalities could be completed. The English were not all that keen on their girls marrying "colonials" so there were formalities. In the excitement I foolishly severed all connections with the Squadron, something which, in later years, I have come to regret. I served with three different squadrons, the first two operating from permanent bases in England which meant there were formal photos of personnel with names on the back. However, as Jimmy and I joined 122 Squadron only days before D-Day and were straight into the action there was no time for formal photos. The "game" was on, most of us had nicknames {Jimmy/Snow] some blokes you never knew their proper Christian names or even how to spell their surnames which strains memories after sixty years. There were several Canadians on 122 Squadron, the only names I can recall were "Speedy" Cush & "X" Exel [I think]. Speedy from, somewhere near Calgary, "X" fom London, Ontario, again I think. My apologies if I have bored you.Regards "Snow" Davis ![]() Last update on 13 June 2020.
Contributed by: Chung Chee Min
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