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Excavations > 2006>
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Curtiss
Mohawk - Wiltshire, England |
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On the 1st March 1941 a Curtiss Mohawk fighter aircraft took
off from Boscombe Down airfield. It’s pilot, Squadron
leader John Edgar Dutton was an experienced test pilot who
had been awarded the Air Force Cross medal earlier in the
year. The purpose of the flight was to test the heating equipment
for the aircraft’s six Browning machine guns, guns often
freezing in the cold air above 20,000”. During the flight
a fire started on board. At 10:30 in the morning the Mohawk
was seen to dive, burning, out of the cloud base and bury
itself in a large crater. Mr. Edmund Tibbotts, a dairyman
working on the water meadow next to the Wylye, witnessed the
crash. His witness testimony was called on in the following
Air Force investigation and what he had seen made such an
impression on him that he passed the story down to his daughter
in law.
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The water meadow at Hanging Langford where the Mohawk
had crashed.
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Despite a dry summer, the water table was only just
below the surface.
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The muddy job of finding parts in the slurry lifted
from the crater.
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On the first of August the owner of the land at Hanging Langford
was kind enough to allow the excavation of a World War 2 aircraft
which had crashed on her land. The pieces recovered have started
to unravel the story of a tragic accident which happened 65
years ago.
Whilst looking for another aircraft, a Spitfire which had
crashed ‘near Codford’ members of the Marches
Aviation Society made an appeal for information in the local
press. As well as leads which located this aircraft they were
also contacted by a Mrs Jean Twigg from Andover. She was Mr.
Tibbott’s daughter in law and over the coming months
she not only returned to Hanging Langford to refresh her memory
but contacted Miss Dixon the landowner and identified the
spot where the plane had come down. All that was left to do
was find what this mystery aircraft that had dropped from
the sky was. There were two ways forward, to examine the records
of every aircraft which came down in Wiltshire (many hundreds)
to check for mention of Hanging Langford, or to identify the
aircraft from the small parts left behind.
The Marches Aviation Society is a group of individuals dedicated
to recording and remembering the sacrifices made in the air
over Britain in the World War 2. The recovery and preservation
of crashed wartime aircraft is known as Aviation Archaeology
and is overseen by the British Aviation Archaeological Council
and the Ministry of Defence who still claim ownership of these
long forgotten fragments. Over the years they have amassed
a great deal of information and knowledge and was put to the
test with Mrs Twigg’s mystery plane.
A morning spent with a metal detector found a surprising amount
of the aircraft lying just under the turf. A shiny black push
rod suggested an American aircraft with a radial air cooled
engine, yellow painted aluminium suggested a British training
aircraft (which were painted yellow underneath as an ‘L’
plate style warning) the recoil buffer from a British .303
machine gun showed the plane was armed and a stainless steel
ammunition track again pointed to American manufacture. This
suggested that the plane was either an RAF Miles Master trainer,
some of which were fitted with American engines, or more likely
a Harvard, an American training plane bought and flown by
the RAF. According to the available records neither of these
types had crashed near Hanging Langford. It was only when
cleaning a rather unpromising looking access panel that the
yellow paint washed away to reveal the legend ‘Vidanger
de….’ Unmistakably French.
With War clouds looming in the late 1930’s the French
government realized they did not have enough modern fighting
aircraft to defend themselves. They turned to America and
ordered large numbers of Curtiss H75 Hawk fighters (the Curtiss
sales brochure was apparently a joy to behold). By the time
the Nazi Blitzkrieg struck in 1940 the French had several
squadrons of Hawks in service but this was still only a small
part of their order. French Hawks shot down the first Luftwaffe
aircraft of the campaign and accounted for more Germans than
any of the home produced Morane Saulnier or Dewotine fighters
but could not stem the flow. With the surrender of France
some pilots flew their aircraft to Britain although more sided
with the Vichy government in the south of France. These Vichy
Hawks were later flown against the Allies in North Africa,
one of only a few types to served on both sides during the
war. The US Air Force was still flying Hawks in 1941 and it
was one of these which shot down a Japanese dive-bomber during
the attack on Pearl Harbor. The remaining French Hawks were
shipped directly to Britain, still in French camouflage and
with French instruments and equipment. One of these was tested
at Boscombe Down against a Spitfire and as a result the type
was deemed unfit for service in Europe and the remaining Hawks,
or Mohawks as they were named in RAF service, were shipped
to Asia to fight the Japanese.
With the knowledge that the Hanging Langford plane was an
American aircraft built for the French it was quickly identified
as a Mohawk. It was Serial No BK877 of the Aircraft Armament
Experimental Establishment at Boscombe Down. It had also been
excavated in 1980 by the London Air Museum who had removed
the engine, propeller and cockpit. The only mystery left was
whether the aircraft was one of those which had served in
the Battle of France or one of the later batches which had
been shipped directly to the UK.Despite having been dug previously
a deep seeking metal detector, actually a government surplus
bomb locator, showed there was a lot of wreckage remaining
and so with Miss Dixon’s permission a licence was obtained
from the MOD to excavate.
Aviation archaeology differs from traditional archaeology
in many ways. Depending on the type of crash and ground conditions
several tons of an aircraft can often be found. Instead of
trowel and brush a JCB is often used and in this case Digger
Martin did a superb job of extracting the aircraft from the
ground. The dig started smoothly with the topsoil removed
and pieces of aluminium structure quickly appearing. Amongst
the first identifiable pieces of plane were a magneto from
the engine, the British throttle control from the side of
the cockpit (a replacement for the French unit which worked
backwards) and the label from the fire extinguisher, manufactured
in Detroit but with the operating instructions in French.
With the excavation down to 5” the water table made
it’s presence felt with the hole quickly filling up
nearly to ground level. From then on Digger gave the impression
of fishing in soup, pulling out buckets of mud and water with
fragments of aircraft mixed up amongst it. This made it very
difficult to identify pieces and the wreckage was simply loaded
into trailers for later cleaning. One section recognized had
a manufacturers label showing that the Mohawk was the 99th
A-4 model and had been completed in May 1940. This meant it
could not have been shipped across the Atlantic in time to
reach the Battle of France. Big pieces included a self-sealing
fuel tank from the wing and some large pieces of the cockpit
floor. Some of the items were in a perfect state of preservation,
still shining after 65 years whereas other sections had corroded
away to nothing. Amongst the mud encrusted pieces were the
pedals and seat of a bicycle and a garden hoe. Not standard
RAF equipment! A surprising and slightly alarming find were
four of the aircraft’s six .303 Browning machine guns,
the last sticking out of the digger bucket like a cocktail
stick. These are now with a firearms dealer who is deactivating
them to comply with the law.
In all about a ton of wreckage was recovered and pressure
washing it over the following days revealed more of its history.
A flattened stainless steel box contained fired bullet cases,
all dated 1940, the results of the gun testing on the final
flight. Painted panels had more French instructions on them
as well as showing parts of the camouflage pattern the plane
was delivered in. It could be seen were the RAF fitters had
masked the underside of the aircraft before spraying it, with
over sprays of yellow paint on the silver wheel rims. Most
telling of all was the blackening on some of the structure
where it had been touched by fire, particularly on the cockpit
floor and wing root. One of the wing ribs had melted through
leaving a blob of once liquid metal.
Test pilots would always try to bring an aircraft back for
analysis rather than abandon it and lose the results of their
work. It seems that Squadron Leader Dutton was killed trying
to bring his burning aircraft back to base.
There is now a museum at Boscombe Down airfield and it is
fitting that some of the larger pieces will be returned there
after 65 years away. A more local commemoration of the event
will be the unveiling of a memorial plaque on a section of
Sqn. Ldr. Dutton’s aircraft in Hanging Langford church.
A reminder of a tragic, but all too common event.
We shall Remember Them.
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