April 24, 2005 at 12:37 pm
On the 31 december 1955 I was in the control tower at the R A F station West Freugh, I was enjoying sardines on toast as midnight approached, suddenly the teleprinter sprung into life. It was a new year greeting from either Shannon or Prestwich, however the message was cut off before finishing. In the morning we heard on the radio of a tragic accident, I have tried to find some info on this crash with no luck, I know some of you guys can come up with the gen.
While I am here perhaps someone knows about this incident? A large American bomber, I believe the first of its type to reach the U K, possibly a B36, Its pilot unfamiliar with our airfield lighting system was on short finals to its destination on a dark frosty night. The aircraft landed, the crew not impressed with British runways. I am down, where do I go from here asked the pilot? The controller was adamant he had not yet landed. He had landed a mile or so short, gone through a couple of hedges and I believe over a road, thanks to the frosty ground the only damage to the aircraft was the nose wheel gear. No who can tell me if this is true, or is it a shaggy dog story? :diablo:
By: peters2402 - 1st February 2006 at 21:24
B36 at Boscombe Down
I remember this event well. I was 13 and lived near the end of the SE/NW runway at BD, so was inevitably an air enthusiast. The story I heard from my father, who worked on the airfield, was that a B36 lost hydraulics over southern england somewhere and Boscombe Down, with the longest runway around was chosen for landing. The plane flew round for hours burning fuel – I can still remember the unique sound of 6 engines droning in the early morning. It was very cold with lots of snow on the ground. It finished up on the porton/highpost road well off the western end of the runway and I always imagined that it had overshot with no brakes and a snow-covered runway, although that kind of weather more often happened in an easterly wind, so I guess the story of undershooting is more likely. I thought at the time that it had landed in daylight, so the story of lights seems unlikely.
By: grounded - 26th April 2005 at 23:52
Thanks Guppy, I am sure the accident I am referring to happened on Jan 1 1954 (just).
It was R A F policy to allow the English Xmas leave and the Scotch New year, that was the reason I was on the station at the time. It would however be a coincidence for Prestwick to have two accidents in one week. I am aware that your memory has a habit of playing nasty tricks on you as you grow older. I visited the Graham web site and found it very informative, thanks again.
By: Super Guppy - 26th April 2005 at 13:49
If it was Xmas rather than New Year , it could have been this accident :-
12/25/1954
LOCATION: Prestwick, Ayrshire, Scotland
CARRIER: British Overseas Airways FLIGHT:
AIRCRAFT: Boeing Stratocruiser
REGISTRY: G-ALSA S/N: 15943
DETAILS: Crashed during approach
More details here : http://www.ingraham.ca/bob/prestwickcause.html
By: grounded - 25th April 2005 at 06:29
Thanks for that info on the B36 but still wondering what a/c pranged on, ?oops my 1955 should have been 1954, sorry bout that.
By: Mark12 - 24th April 2005 at 22:44
“Lettice Curtis – Her Autobiography”
I thought this was ringing a recent bell.
Lettice Curtis in her autobiography, published last year, devotes five pages and two photographs to this incident.
..and incidentally a damn fine read.
Controller: “You are two miles to touchdown, on centreline”
Pilot: “I have landed.” A slight pause , then: “My isn’t your field rough!”
Mark
By: crazymainer - 24th April 2005 at 22:17
Let me check my info. on Loring AFB but I think this was one of Loring Aircraft.
I recall that one of the first 36 they sent over the pond had to be sent back to the factory to be rebuild due to a nasty landing in the UK
RER
By: Rocketeer - 24th April 2005 at 20:28
Hi all.
I wrote about this incident a while ago.
I’d love any further information on this too.
Cheers
Andy
There was a big article in our Boscombe Bulletin on it some years ago…I will see if I can track it down!
By: Andy in Beds - 24th April 2005 at 17:31
Hi all.
I wrote about this incident a while ago.
I’d love any further information on this too.
Cheers
Andy
By: dhfan - 24th April 2005 at 16:05
Found this
http://forum.keypublishing.co.uk/showthread.php?t=28834
about a B.36 that landed at Enstone. No more details.
By: Cloudy - 24th April 2005 at 15:41
I think something like this happened at Boscombe Down …
In January of 1952, B-36D 44-92042 landed a mile short of the runway at Boscombe Down in a snow-covered field. They towed it to the runway and (someone else) flew it back to the USA. The short blurb in the book “Convair B-36” mentions that the pilot was attempting to land in a snowstorm, circled the spire of Salisbury Cathedral (perhaps the Brits can validate the geography) and finally mistook some distant lights for the runway’s approach lights.
By: Papa Lima - 24th April 2005 at 14:40
Try the May 1994 Flypast article on this subject – I lent out my old Flypasts and never got them back . . .
“Never a borrower nor lender be” (old saying., and how true!)
I also have a feeling that this came up on a thread a year or two ago but couldn’t find it via “Search”.
By: uksceneryman - 24th April 2005 at 12:38
I think something like this happened at Boscombe Down …