Robert Ross Ferguson
Robert Ross Ferguson (May 13, 1917 - September 19, 2006)[1] BA (University of Saskatchewan 1946), BSc (University of Regina 1949), CM, S.O.M., LL.D (Hon), University of Regina, exemplified the life of service. Inspired by his father, Dr. R.G. Ferguson, "Bob" was imbued from an early age with a sense of responsibility for his community, his province, and his country. He expressed this commitment early in the 1995 film documentary "My Father's Legacy": "I wanted to live my life in a manner in which my father would be proud." And he did.[2]
Service
Bob Ferguson's service began with his distinguished career in the Royal Canadian Air Force. His subsequent public service included:[2][3]
- Member, Board of the University of Saskatchewan
- Founding member, Board the University of Regina
- Chair, Alumni Fund, the University of Regina
- Reeve, Municipality of Qu'Appelle
- Chair, Saskatchewan Lung Association
- Member, Edgeley Cooperative Association Board
- Member, Egg Lake Conservation and Development Authority
Recognition
Public recognition followed Bob Ferguson's community service:
- 1984 Honorary Doctor of Laws Degree (LL.D), the University of Regina
- 1986 "Distinguished Graduate in Agriculture" the University of Saskatchewan
- 1987 Order of Canada
- 1994 Saskatchewan Order of Merit
- 2005 Saskatchewan Centennial Medal
Early Life and Education
Robert Ross Ferguson was born May 13, 1917 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Two months later his parents moved to Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan, where his father, Dr. R.G. Ferguson, had been appointed General Superintendent and Medical Director of the recently established Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League. This was a difficult time for the young family. Dr. Ferguson was treating his own brother, Vernon, who had returned from service in Ypres, Belgium with tuberculosis. Tragedy struck when another of Dr. Ferguson's younger brothers, Frank, a member of RFC 87 Squadron, was killed when the Sopwith Dolphin he was flying in a dogfight near the Canadian-German line in France was shot down by German Ace Michael Hutterer. Frank Ferguson was shot down September 3, 1918 near Marcoyne. Matters at home were not helped by another legacy of the war: Spanish influenza (aka H1N1). George became ill and was quarantined in the TB Sanatorium.
Bob Ferguson had hoped to follow in his father's footsteps by establishing a career in medicine, however that was not to be. Instead, he began a degree in agriculture at the University of Regina in 1937. As was the case for so many of his generation, his education was interrupted by World War II.[4]
World War II
Bob Ferguson's flight training took place over the winter of 1940-41. Assigned to Night Fighter (Cougar) Squadron 410, whose job was to protect the coast of Scotland and, later, England. The first official sortie of No. 410 Squadron was from RAF Drem, East Lothian, Scotland, on the night of 4 June 1942, when twelve Beaufighter crews took off. It went on to become the top-scoring night fighter squadron in the RAF Second Tactical Air Force during the period between D-Day and VE-Day.
No. 410 Squadron supported the Allied forces during the Normandy Landings and the Battle of the Bulge, flew nightly patrols during this time and many of its pilots gained ace status. Two members of No. 410 Squadron, Flight Lieutenant (F/L) Currie and Flying Officer (F/O) Rose, were the first members of the RCAF to see the German V-2 rocket in flight.
While with Squadron 410 Ferguson met and became roommates with John Aiken (later Sir John Aiken). Aiken later became Chief Air Marshal of the RAF. Much later he was to say of Ferguson: "A natural leader, Bob Ferguson cared deeply for his squadron and it showed in the respect he showed his pilots and his initiative in improving skills. Indeed to me he personified the success of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan."
Ferguson was promoted rapidly, achieving the rank of Flying Officer in October, 1942, Flight Lieutenant in January 1943, and Squadron Leader in January 1944.
Ferguson quickly developed a reputation for innovative training and meticulous preparation with his squadron and took them up at night where they would chase each other in the dark in order to improve their skills with the use of the radar. He identified several weaknesses in the aerial gunnery courses which were all taught on Spitfires while most pilots flew other more heavily armoured aircraft. Hearing his criticism Wing Commander Archie Winskill of RAF Winfield called on Ferguson to set up and develop a twin engine gunnery course. He did, the course was very successful and soon pilots brought their own Mosquito or Beaufighter planes with them for training from all over the UK. The students were interviewed continually to refine the course and further improve the training before the pilots were posted to aerial combat.
Bob,too,flew a de Havilland Mosquito fighter/ bomber during WWll. When the Mosquito entered production in 1941, it was one of the fastest operational aircraft in the world. Entering widespread service in 1942, the Mosquito supported RAF strategic night fighter defence forces in the United Kingdom from Luftwaffe raids, most notably defeating the German aerial offensive Operation Steinbock in 1944. Offensively, the Mosquito units also conducted night time fighter sweeps in indirect and direct protection of RAF Bomber Command's heavy bombers to help reduce RAF bomber losses in 1944 and 1945.
Home on leave in September 1944 Bob was invited to "pin" the wings on his younger brother David at his graduation as a pilot and air gunner in the RCAF.
Bob Ferguson gave up flying after the war but maintained a keen interest in his beloved 410 Squadron, later led by his brother in law, Wing Commander Keith Fallis. Now responsible for ensuring the safety of Canada's domestic airspace Cougar Squadron currently operates out of Cold Lake Alberta as the operational training squadron for Canada's CF-18 fleet.[5]
After the War
Ferguson returned to the University of Saskatchewan to complete his degree. He began farming before the war and resumed it when the war ended, at the same time finishing his Bachelor of Arts degree (1946) from the University of Saskatchewan and Bachelor of Science in Agriculture in 1949. His 1946 graduation marked a memorable occasion: his father received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree at the same ceremony. "When I got my BA, he got his Honorary Doctor of Laws. And when I went across the stage to pick up my diploma, my father bowed graciously as I went by" he recalled in an interview with The University of Regina's Alumni Magazine in Fall 1999.
In the film 'My Father's Legacy' he recounts his father saying, "Now that you have received your degree you must remember that you have only paid for a small part of the cost of your education. What are you going to for your community, your province and your country to help repay the cost of the education for which they have paid for you."
His father's call to action on graduation day was all the motivation he needed. With characteristic understatement he said, "When dad asked me what I was going to do it got me thinking." In spite of his disappointment at not being able to follow in his father's footsteps by establishing a medical career, he found another vocation: farming.
Farming opened the door to extensive involvement in community service, particularly in support of Saskatchewan's two universities. As a University of Regina alumnus he helped build the alumni association, serving on the board from its inception. In that capacity he helped establish awards for excellence to honour professors' research and teaching, and was the first chair of the scholarship committee. He saw scholarships as a way to give back to the institution, and has established three at the University of Regina.
Bob Ferguson had a happy family life. He was devoted to his wife Norma, giving her roses every week of their 57 years of marriage. In 1999 he told the U of R Alumni Magazine: "I've had a most exciting and interesting life. I look back on it and I just wouldn't have changed anything." He died on September 19, 2006 in Regina, Saskatchewan, leaving four children and six grandchildren.[4][6]
Bob lived his life in a way in which his father would be proud but he did not live his life in his father's shadow. He lived his own life, deeply inspired by his father's values and ideals. Characteristically, one of his last official acts was to sign the letters for the 2006 Christmas Seals Campaign for the Saskatchewan Lung Association. He said "If the Lung Association has benefited from our association half as much as I have then it has been time well spent."
References
- ↑ Ralph, Wayne (2005). Aces, Warriors and Wingmen: The Firsthand Accounts of Canada's Fighter Pilots in the Second World War. Wiley. p. 115. ISBN 0470835907.
- 1 2 Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina
- ↑ palspage.ca
- 1 2 The Third Degree, University of Regina Alumni Magazine, Fall 1999, Volume 11, Number 2. pg. 16-17
- ↑ Ralph, Wayne "Aces, Warriors and Wingmen" John Wiley & Sons 2005
- ↑ "Robert Ross Ferguson". findagrave. Retrieved 28 January 2015.