Melville Hermes Joseph "Mel" Dalphond (1922-1991) was born in Edmonton to John and Grace Dalphond, and grew up in Morinville. In 1940 Dalphond enlisted in the RCAF, receiving bombing and gunnery training at RCAF Station Mossbank, then wireless air-gunner training at RCAF Station Mt Hope. Shipping out to England, he arrived in December 1940 and was assigned to 405 Squadron RCAF at RAF Wellesbourne, Mountford. On July 24, 1941 Dalphond flew as the nose gunner in Wellington W5551, piloted by Wing Commander Peter Alexander Gilchrist, on a daytime raid on Brest, France. The aircraft was shot down a German ME 109 fighter, crashing between Lesneven and Ploudaniel, France. Dalphond bailed out of the plane and after struggling to open his parachute landed safely, where his fluency in the French language helped when he was taken in by a local family while he recuperated. With the guidance of members of the French Resistance, Dalphond trekked across the country to within one mile of the Franco-Spanish border, but unable to cross the Pyrenees Mountains in the dark, he spent a night in the loft of a barn. Unfortunately, the following morning he was discovered by a unit of the Gestapo using a German Shepherd and arrested. Dalphond was held at Fort de la Revère, a moated prison on the south coast of France near Eze. Here, he was "something less than a model prisoner." As well as serving on various escape committees, he was an expert in key theft and manufacture, which resulted in an escape from the prison by Sergeant Dalphond and several others through a tunnel on on September 5, 1942. By January Dalphond had safely returned to England, and on January 21, 1943 was awarded the Distinguished Flying Medal. Upon his return to England, Dalphond also enrolled in pilot training and after earning his wings served as a pilot in Transport Command for the duration of the War. After the end of the war in 1945, Dalphond remained in the RCAF serving across Canada and Europe. In 1962 he was a member of the International Control Commission in Vietnam. He retired from the Air Force in 1963 at the rank of Squadron Leader.
On 26 August 1944, Dalphond married Margaret Winifred "Peggy" Quint (1920-1992) of Calgary. Peggy was the daughter of Dr Walter S. Quint. The couple had one son, Murray. When Squadron Leader Dalphond retired from the RCAF in 1963, the couple settled in Calgary and built their house on Riverdale Avenue. They lived in this house until 1979 when they moved to Summerland, British Columbia.
A full chapter of Edmond Cosgrove's 1970 book The Evaders details Dalphond's wartime exploits
from: https://www.calgarymodern.com/house/melville-h.-dalphond-house
RAF Evaders, The Comprehensive Story of Thousands of Escapers and Their Escape Lines, Western Europe, 1940-1945 by Oliver Clutton-Brock, pages 82, 101-02
Free to Fight Again, RAF Escapes and Evasions 1940-1945 by Alan W Cooper, page 41
The Evaders, True Stories of Downed Canadian Airmen and Their Helpers in World War II by Emerson Lavender and Norman Sheffe, pages 84,85-8,93
