October 22, 2024 at 9:02 am
Not much left. I wonder what the aircraft were to start with.
MIRACULOUS ESCAPE OF ROYAL AIR FORCE PILOTS AFTER A COLLISION IN MID–AIR:
GREAT VALUE OF PARACHUTES
The tangled wreckage of two single-seater aeroplanes of the Northumberland Squadron, which collided while looping the loop in close formation with four other machines. Both pilots, Flight-Lieutenant Brookes and Sergeant Willis, jumped clear and landed safely with parachutes. In a similar collision a fortnight earlier three occupants escaped death by means of parachutes. More than 100 lives have been saved since 1926, when the use of parachutes was made compulsory in the Royal Air Force.
New Zealand Herald, 26 June 1934

By: avion ancien - 24th October 2024 at 10:06
On the basis that pilotless, badly damaged Bristol Bulldogs are likely to drop like lead balloons, one might expect them to come to earth not far away from where the collision took place. Furthermore, if the eye witness reports are to be accepted, their descents probably were made with less that their full complement of wings!
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 22:20
Funny old thing AA – Dean Lane runs through Alderstead Heath 🙂
By: avion ancien - 23rd October 2024 at 18:11
According to the Surrey Mirror of 18 May 1934 (q.v. http://sussexhistoryforum.co.uk/index.php?topic=23000.msg94817;topicseen#msg94817), the two Bulldogs belonged to No. 3 Squadron, then based at Kenley. Their pilots landed, by parachute, near Chaldon Church. The aeroplanes crashed to earth in separate fields adjoining Dean Lane, Hooley.
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 16:34
D.S Brookes was OC 74 Sqn in 1936
OC No 74 Squadron
19 Jul 1936 Flt Lt D S Brookes
1 Sep 1936 Sqn Ldr D S Brookes
By: adrian_gray - 23rd October 2024 at 16:11
It would seem my wild guess was wrong this time! Surprised that he was still pootling about the skies at 34, when presumably he joined up very close to the end of WW1.
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 15:41
Hypersonic
If there had been a WO1 on 3 Sqn he would have been on the Sqn Nominal Roll.
Mr Blampied most definitely joined the RAF (from IWM website ).
Mr Blampied liked the Blue Suit so much he later became an Air Cadet WO 😉
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 15:37
From Unithistories
https://www.unithistories.com/officers/RAF_officers_B01.html
Donald Scott Brookes,at some stage transferred to Technical Branch,retired as Group Captain 1946ish
Brookes,
Donald Scott,20.04.1900
Rugby, Leicestershire
–
(D).1968
Hatfield district, HertfordshireSq.Ldr.
01.10.1936 [17155](WS) W/Cdr.
09.12.1944(T) Gp.Capt.
? (retd 09.10.1946)
By: adrian_gray - 23rd October 2024 at 15:22
Maybe Brooks carried the can?
By: avion ancien - 23rd October 2024 at 15:06
Sgt Willis, it seems, not only survived the mid-air collision but also WWII (although three of those years were spent as a PoW in Stalag Luft III). Commissioned in 1940, he ended his RAF career in 1956 as a wing commander and officer commanding RAF Cranwell. Oddly, I can find nothing about Flt Lt Brooks’ RAF career subsequent to the mid-air collision.
By: hypersonic - 23rd October 2024 at 14:54
AI is telling me that WO 2 was indeed around, in the RAF, until 1939. That is something I wasn’t aware of. Despite having served 25 years in the “light blue” force. However, it is possible for him to be on secondment from the Army at the time. Secondments do produce strange anomalies from time to time. If he was established in the RAF, I would have expected there to be a WO 1 above him. The latter serving as the Sqn WO.
Just to show an example of secondment strange happenings. 617 Sqn (perhaps the most RAF of any RAF Sqn) has a new Boss. He is the only RM Fast Jet pilot. To take on the roll he has had to go on secondment to the FAA. Having recently been on secondment to the RAF.
H
By: adrian_gray - 23rd October 2024 at 14:24
Of the men in the list above, a B P A Boitel-Gill* was with 152 sqn in 1940, Donaldson was a Sqn Ldr with 151 sqn, according to After The Battle’s listing.
One wonders what the others were doing – instructors? Reservists? Flying a desk? 6 short years later.
*FreeBMD might help ascertain if this is Derek but is horribly phone unfriendly, and I should br doing other things!
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 13:52
Hi Hypersonic
Mr Blampied was ex Army – the RAF had the WO2 Rank until 1939*( from memory) 😉
By: hypersonic - 23rd October 2024 at 13:22
Bazv,
Thanks for the RAFWEB data.
A slight correction if I may. “Mr” Blampied is not ex Army – he is Army. There has never been two classes of WO in the RAF. Your either a WO or your not.
However, it is interesting to note two of them made it to 2* (Air Vice Marshal) and another made it to 1* (Air Commodore). Presumably as part of the RAF expansion on the run up to WW II / during WW II.
H
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 12:30
From RAFWEB
Not sure if link will work as it is in the members area of rafweb
https://www.rafweb.org/Members%20Pages/Unit%20Details/Squadrons/001-050…
3 Sqn Pilots Roll (inc Donald S Brookes) + the wonderfully named WO2 Lionel Blampied DCM,MM who was ex Army and I assume filling the role of ‘Sgt Major/Sqn Warrant Officer’

By: avion ancien - 23rd October 2024 at 10:53
It appears that the pilots’ full names were Flt Lt Donald Scott Brooks and Sgt James Donald Wakefield Willis.
By: bazv - 23rd October 2024 at 08:53
The Crash site is very close to Kenley (Alderstead Heath) – 3 Sqn were based at Kenley at the time (they had just recently moved to Kenley) and 3 Sqn did have a commissioned pilot called Brookes on strength at the time.I could not check on Sgt Willis as the Sqn Roll I looked at (on RAFWEB) only showed commissioned Officers and a WO2.
So circumstantially I would say probably a 3 Sqn accident,I believe there was another a/c involved in the mid air but presumably made it back to Kenley for some sort of landing (but written off).
By: hypersonic - 22nd October 2024 at 23:02
RAF Grantham / Spittlegate did have a based unit called 3 FTS. But 3 Sqn was never based there. Grantham is in God’s own county of Lincolnshire – I don’t understand the connection with “Northumberland”.
H
By: dhfan - 22nd October 2024 at 22:36
Trumper. Their thinking was that aircrew might bale out rather than fight.
Generals etc., with the intelligence and common sense of a cheese sandwich.
By: adrian_gray - 22nd October 2024 at 20:56
Not bad for a guess! So that will be K2486 in a heap at the front.
I did ponder mentioning the narrow rudder meaning that the letter in the serial was above the number looked like Bulldog too, but I realised that I had no idea about other types, and was really meant to be doing other things than looking it up…7
By: Mothminor - 22nd October 2024 at 19:39
Nice one Adrian. Both aircraft were Bulldogs from 3 FTS at Grantham. They collided over Alderstead Heath, Surrey on 16th May 1934. K2486 and K1651 being the aircraft involved.
Info according to The Scotsman newspaper. Not sure though that 3 (or as they put it – Third) FTS is correct. More likely 3 Squadron?