White Vision was bred by the Fleming brothers of
Motherwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland. During the Second World War she was lent to the
National Pigeon Service, On 11 October 1943, White Vision was aboard a
Consolidated PBY Catalina flying boat when it was forced to ditch in the
North Sea near the
Hebrides off the coast of Scotland. With the plane's radio out of action, she was released to indicate where the plane had gone down, as bad weather conditions were preventing it from being found by other planes. She flew some against a strong headwind, arriving back at her pigeon loft. The search was resumed and the plane was subsequently found, with all eleven members of the air crew saved after they had spent some eighteen hours in the sea. She was awarded the
Dickin Medal on 2 December 1943; her medal citation reads "For delivering a message under exceptionally difficult conditions and so contributing to the rescue of an Air Crew while serving with the RAF in October 1943." The medal is referred to as the animal's
Victoria Cross, and White Vision was one of the first pigeons to be awarded it. ==See also==