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8.
HAUGHMOND MOSQUITO
On the night of 9th November, 1944,
Mosquito NF Il, DZ 244, of 60 Operational Training Unit, High Ercall, took
off for an exercise in circuits and landings. The Pilot, Flying Officer
Feliks Pawel Nowak, was flying solo on night fighter conversion training.
At around 1am, just after
his sixth take-off, the Mosquito veered into a sharp turn in the
circuit area and went into a spiral dive before crashing vertically
and exploding on impact at Haughmond Farm, near Shrewsbury.
The cause of the crash points
to engine failure at low speed. A report from the Aeroplane and
Armament Establishment at Boscombe Down indicates that during a test
flight in a Mosquito, the pilot was carrying out an asymmetric test at
critical speeds when the starboard engine cut out at 32,500 feet. The
aircraft had then swung immediately to the right and entered a dive.
At 25,000 feet, at an airspeed of about four hundred miles an hour,
control was lost, only to be regained at 21,500 feet, following a loss
of 11,000 feet.
A former Mosquito navigator
at High Ercall has recalled that failure of one engine could be
difficult for a pilot to handle. At low altitude, there would have
been little chance for Flying Officer Nowak to keep control, although
he was considered to be a competent pilot, with over five hundred
flying hours experience on aircraft including Tiger Moths and Oxfords.
After service with the Polish
army from 1937 to 1938, he became a cotton expert until Germany
invaded Poland, when he saw much fighting with the 59th Infantry
Regiment. Escaping from Poland via Hungary and Yugoslavia to France,
he once again joined the Polish forces, under French control.
At some time during this
period, it appears that he became a prisoner of war, but little is
known of his life until he made his way to England via France, Spain
and Portugal, when he joined the Polish aircrew training centre at
Hucknall, Derbyshire, in July, 1942.
On September 1st 1943, he was
commissioned as Pilot Officer and posted to High Ercall on October
17th 1944. A few weeks later, his life was to end.
Several years ago, a lady
visited Haughmond Farm with her daughter. She was Delphing Nowak, the
wife of Feliks. Sadly, Feliks had not been destined to see his beloved
Poland or his daughter when he died at the age of twenty eight.
When the Mosquito crashed,
wreckage was spread over a wide area, with burning debris landing on
the front yard of the farm, only forty yards from the impact point. On
the other side of the field a main wheel landed in a garden.
Apparently, no damage was caused to any of the nearby buildings.

A visit to the site today
indicates very little of the accident, although a detailed search
reveals small scattered fragments of the Mosquito. The field has never
been ploughed due to its rocky surface.
Some years ago, members of
the Shropshire-based Wartime Aircraft Recovery Group made a shallow
excavation at the site before reaching compact shale through which the
wreckage had not penetrated. Items found included engine remains,
burnt wood, light alloy fragments and a small bracket bearing the
Mosquito part number prefix, 98, and a De Havilland inspection stamp.
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