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John Beattie awarded Hanna Trophy ( for outstanding contribution to display flying)

The Honourable Company of air Pilots have circulated the following citation.

JOHN BEATTIE MBE

John Beattie has been a stalwart of the UK Air Display circuit for over 40 years with his first display occurring in 1973 whilst on an exchange tour with the Army Air Corps flying the Scout AH.1. As the Senior Pilot of 705 Naval Air Squadron, he led the renowned Sharks Helicopter Display Team in 1982 flying the Gazelle HT.2.

Having not had his fill of display flying, John joined the Royal Navy Historic Flight (RNHF) in 1986, having already accrued a large number of tail-wheel hours flying Chipmunks while aero-towing for the RN Gliding Clubs since 1979. An initial season displaying the Swordfish in 1986 subsequently led to him stepping into the Firefly AS.5 in 1987 and both the Sea Fury FB.11 and T.20 in 1988. He took over as the Flight Commander of RNHF in 1991 where he remained until he retired from the Royal Navy in 1994.

After life in the RN John took up a career with the airlines, but this never deterred him from display flying and throughout the nineties and even currently he can be seen displaying historic Rotary and Fixed Wing aircraft at air displays all over the UK.

He returned to the RNHF in 2004 as the civilian General Manager and as a mentor for the RNHF pilots following the tragic loss of the Firefly and its crew in a display accident the previous year. John eventually retired in 2009, but continues to mentor RNHF pilots whilst displaying Warbirds as Chief Pilot of Kennet Aviation and other historic collections when asked.

John has made a significant contribution to the RNHF over the years, but particularly in the last decade, both as the General Manager and now as a pilot mentor. As a mentor he generously gives up his time to fly with all the pilots on a regular basis allowing them to benefit from his extensive experience and wisdom. He has also facilitated the use of civilian aircraft such as the Piston Provost, Jet Provost, T6 Texan and his own Chipmunk on a regular basis, all of which have been invaluable. Combined with John’s continued coaching and encouragement this allows the pilots to safely make the transition from the Chipmunk to the Swordfish and ultimately the Sea Fury, or Sea Hawk, thus ensuring the pilots are suitably qualified to display historic aircraft to the general public in a safe manner.

Over the past few years John (along with his co-owner) has generously allowed the RNHF the use of his Chipmunk for continuation training when the Flight’s Chipmunk has been unavailable for engineering reasons. This comes at considerable personal financial cost to John as the RNHF do not pay him for the hours used and since October 2013 to May 2014, RNHF pilots have flown 60 hours (half the RNHF annual Chipmunk allocation) on his aeroplane alone. Without this unwavering support, the RNHF would find it incredibly difficult to operate safely.

As an experienced DAE he has utilised his extensive knowledge to mentor many civilian display acts whilst remaining an active display pilot. At displays he is always keen to engage with the general public, (the raison d’être for display flying after all) by showing them the aeroplanes up close and answering many questions. He can often be observed allowing little boys and girls as well as not so little boys and girls to sit in the cockpits of these rare machines making aeroplane noises, pretending they are wheeling it through the skies just for a moment. It makes one wonder how many of those little boys or girls have become, or are going to become pilots after that momentary encounter with John at an Air Show somewhere.

Needless to say that the UK Air Display Circuit would have been a less interesting and potentially less safe arena for the general public if so many pilots, both military and civilian hadn’t benefitted from his wisdom and so many people had not witnessed his graceful displays. His outstanding contribution to ‘warbird’ display flying is recognised by the award of the Hanna Trophy.

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By: Sgt.Austin - 5th November 2014 at 10:25

Sorry, yes my mistake. I was confused as I’m sure it is the wreckage of the 2-seater that is looked at in the video but I may be mistaken, apologies if so, along time since I’ve watched it. TF 956 accident was 10 June ’89, before WG665. Though both crashes would date the video as early ’90s.

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By: Mike J - 5th November 2014 at 09:49

Sgt Austin, TF956 was the FB11 that ended up in the water. The accident where the aircraft hit a tree during a forced landing was later, with the Flight’s 2-seater Sea Fury.

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By: Sgt.Austin - 5th November 2014 at 09:43

Congratulations on a well-deserved award. The 1986 video produced for the RNHF is a favourite of mine. In it, John even managed to turn the accident that befell TF956 to good use with an ‘exploded’ walkround of some of the wreckage. In more recent years I was so pleased to see John flying the restored Seafires. Cheers!

The video was a bit later than that, early 90’s. TF956 force landed then hit some trees on a farm local to me. This was on 14 July 1990. I have a home made video somewhere of the navy crash team collecting the wreckage not long after it happened. He told me of his despair as it curved around as it went along the ground towards the only trees in about 80 acres of land, really unlucky, almost got away with minimal damage. John also safely landed the Swordfish not long before that when it lost a cylinder head. A very skilled pilot.

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By: TexanTrev - 5th November 2014 at 02:03

Well deserved award, for a guy that gives so much to others. Congratulations to John.

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By: SE5AFAN - 5th November 2014 at 00:19

Well deserved

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By: charliehunt - 4th November 2014 at 20:33

John Romain received the award in its first year so he is deservedly following in illustrious shoes.

I also knew nothing of his generosity in sharing his Chippie at his own expense.

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By: Seafuryfan - 4th November 2014 at 19:55

Congratulations on a well-deserved award. The 1986 video produced for the RNHF is a favourite of mine. In it, John even managed to turn the accident that befell TF956 to good use with an ‘exploded’ walkround of some of the wreckage. In more recent years I was so pleased to see John flying the restored Seafires. Cheers!

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By: JDK - 4th November 2014 at 11:07

Delighted to see this, worth bringing back to the front page!

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By: Sgt.Austin - 3rd November 2014 at 13:45

A well deserved award in my opinion. I’ve met John a few times over the years and he once very kindly gave myself and some friends a private tour of the RNHF and allowed me to sit in the cockpit of the Firefly. I have often thought his valiant attempt to save the Sea Fury by bouncing it along the runway on one wheel trying to get the other gear leg down before having to take it up and bail out was incredibly brave and worthy of more recognition than it got at the time. It could so easily have gone horribly wrong for him. He is also an excellent chap to get chatting to in the bar, many brilliant stories!

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By: Wyvernfan - 3rd November 2014 at 12:58

Interesting reading and the bit about sharing his Chipmunk with the RNHF for help in training pilots free of charge is certainly worth praise in itself. A hearty congratulations to John Beattie!

Rob

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