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Operating Country

Operator

Manufacturer

Aircraft

Reg / Serial

 

 

RAF

Hawker

Hurricane

LF207

 

  UK RNZAF pilot (Hawker Siddeley)  Fighter / Bomber    

 

 


Acknowledgment
Information and accident data regarding this aircraft
 was kindly provided by
Phillip Jones, Researcher and Author,
 and also contributor to Combined Operations website.
 This website includes information on 516 Squadron RAF.

Site photographs, GPS and other data
was kindly provided by Steve White.

Aircraft Details

Crash Date / Location

Registration or Serial: LF207

Operator: Royal Air Force

Operating Base: RAF Connel; 17 Grp. Coastal; 26 Grp. Bomber Command; 516 Squadron RAF.

Base Location:  North Connel, near Oban, Scotland

Current Airport Status: Closed 1945. Used by light aircraft.


(Principal airport data courtesy of John Woodside, A Catalogue of UK Airfields)


Aircraft Nicknames: Hurry; Flying Tin Openers; Flying Can Openers (later versions).

Aircraft Type & Background

A military single-seat interceptor/fighter/bomber flown by the Royal Air Force. The Hurricane was designed by Sidney Camm and built mainly by Hawker Aircraft Ltd.

The Hawker Hurricane was equipped with 1 Rolls Royce liquid-cooled Merlin III 12-cylinder power plant. Later version had a Merlin XX, XXI or XXII power plant.

It was armed with eight .303 inch Browning machine guns mounted on the wings.

Construction (Mark I)

Fabric covered wings; wooden propeller (metal in revised Mark I) This version was equipped with a Merlin III engine.

Aircraft Accident Details

The Hawker Hurricane featured here was attached to 516 Squadron, 26 Group Bomber Command, then operating out of RAF Connel near Oban on the west coast of Scotland. This aircraft was flown by Fl/Lt A. J. Woodgate (R.N.Z.A.F).

Together with two other Hurricanes, the pilot took off on a low-flying training exercise scheduled to take place just off Ardnamurchan Peninsula, NE of Tobermory on the Isle of Mull. However, after completing the exercise and while beginning their flight back to RAF Connel, the pilots encountered heavy cloud and mist.

In an attempt to find the nearest suitable landing area, the three aircraft separated. Sadly, Fl/Lt Woodgate failed to find a safe landing place, crashing on the side of Beinn na Seilg near Kilchoan on the Ardnamurchan Peninsula. One of his colleagues, flying Hurricane  LF106, crashed a few kilometres away on the Isle of Coll. The third pilot crash-landed his Hurricane at Carse Farm, Stirling, and escaped from the accident.

The pilot who died at Beinn na Seilg, Kilchoan, was:

A granite boulder overlooking this site and the crash site on the Isle of Coll bears a plaque dedicated to the memory of these pilots.

For a more comprehensive account of this accident, please see Phillip Jones' entry at Combined Operations website, under 516 Squadron.

Accident Date

6 February 1944

Accident Site

Beinn na Seilg, nr. Ghleamn Locha (West Ardnamurchan)

Region: Highland (Ardnamurchan)
Nearest town or village: Kilchoan

GPS: NM 46484 63783


Present Condition

Little wreckage left onsite. Memorial has been built up as an extended cairn. [S. White]

Related Links

The following links provide further information on the Hawker Hurricane:

 


Below: Hawker Hurricane at National Museum of the USAF.

Photo: [no date] US Federal Government image released to the public domain.

 

 

 

Below: Mk IIa Hawker Hurricane at National Museum of the USAF.

Hawker Hurricane at National Musuem of USAF

Photo: [no date] US Federal Government image released to the public domain.


Hawker Hurricane inside National Museum of USAF

Above: Mk IIa Hawker Hurricane at National Museum of the USAF.

Photo: [no date] US Federal Government image released to the public domain.


Site Photos and Comments

Acknowledgment

GPS data above and photos in this section
 were kindly provided by
Steve White
and are used here by permission.

Below: the memorial cairn to Fl/Lt Woodgate, located near the site where Hurricane LF207 crashed at Beinn na Seilg. The small piece of wreckage on top of the cairn is one of the few remaining parts of this aircraft.

A short distance to the west of this cairn, and overlooking the second 516 Sqn Hurricane crash site on the Isle of Coll, a memorial plaque can be found, inscribed with the names of both pilots who died in these accidents.

Photo: ©  2008 S. White

Above: Small pitted fragments of aluminium lie almost completely camouflaged among the rocks. One piece is in the exact centre of this photo. The size of these fragments can be assessed by the size of the walking pole lying nearby.

Photo: © 2008 S. White

Below: a small piece of wreckage protrudes upward from the rocks in the foreground.

Photo: © 2008 S. White

Unless otherwise indicated, all photos in this section
copyright © 2008 Steve White

These photographs must not be reproduced without the prior written consent of the original author.

 
 
   

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