Crumpled wreckage |
Undercarriage |
On the 8th November 1943 this aircraft flying out of RAF Halfpenny
Green on a night navigation exercise crashed close to the top of Pen
yr Ole Wen in Snowdonia ,North Wales . There are few small bits of
wreckage to be found on the steep slopes , and trace evidence at
the impact point itself . Although I only looked over the edge at it
and it didnt seem worth the risk going down for a proper look.
There were five crew members all of which lost their lives. The aircraft crashed into the mountain and caught fire, then dropped onto the plateau below beside the lake.
There were five crew members all of which lost their lives. The aircraft crashed into the mountain and caught fire, then dropped onto the plateau below beside the lake.
Below is an exerpt from a report that can be found on Aviation Safety
Network website. There are flaws the largest one being a picture of
the wing from the ventura crash that is perported to be the Anson (the
anson had wooden wings which by their own report were burnt).
'' During the evening of the 8th November 1943 to crew of five took
off for a night navigation exercise. The route was to have covered
approx. 320 miles passing over of close to the following points Base -
Rhyl - Conwy - Douglas - Maughold Head - Chetton - Base. A short way
into the flight the crew received a QDM from RAF Tilstock of 050
degrees with the location of the aircraft being assumed to be in the
area of 4 miles NW of Shawbury roughly on course for Rhyl. It was next
plotted by the Royal Observer Corps on a route that appeared to be a
direct track from Wrexham to Conwy.
A direct track from the Wrexham area to Conwy would not normally have
taken an aircraft into Snowdonia, but on the night there was a 15 mph
wind blowing from west north west which the Court of Inquiry remarked
on as "if correction for drift was not taken the aircraft would
drift south of the second turning point"
At around 20:30 the ROC observed a fire near Carnedd Dafydd, shortly
before this the aircraft while flying in a north westerly direction
had impacted the upper slopes of Pen yr Ole Wen. The aircraft's
engines had been torn off and rolled almost 1000 feet down the
mountain and the fuel tanks had ruptured with their contents igniting.
The fuselage was destroyed but was not burnt by the fire. ''The crew who were all killed were
Sgt. Ernest Andrew Hoagg RCAF Pilot
Sgt. John Hedgley Lewis RAAF Nav
Sgt. William Gavin RAF BA
Sgt. Leslie John Hill RAF WO/AG
Sgt. Douglas John Roberts RAF WO/AG
There does seem to be a great deal of confusion as to which wreckage
comes from what aircraft here . Definatively the undercarriage
sections at the tarn side came from the Anson and panels painted
yellow also came from the Anson ....but some of the wreckage contained
Lockheeds factory mark so were definately from the Ventura despite
reports that state only the wing was from the Ventura.
this could be from a number of aircraft not just the Anson. |
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