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9.
Llynclys Farm
Hampden
0n 30th October 1941, Hampden Mk.I P1294
of 14 Operational Training Unit, Cottesmore, Leicestershire took off
for a daylight cross-country exercise.
As the flight progressed, cloud developed
forcing the pilot, Flying Officer Kerr, to resort to instrument
flying. Of a total of forty-one hours experience on Hampdens, he had
flown over twenty-four hours on instruments.
The Hampden was seen later to dive almost
vertically from cloud before crashing near Llynclys Farm, three miles
from Oswestry. The four crew members were killed. One crew member
survived the impact
and
could be heard screaming by some local
people who rushed to the scene to help. Before they reached the
aircraft it burst into flames.
The Court of Inquiry report indicated
that there was evidence that the pilot had not been properly strapped
into his seat, and may have been thrown forward onto the control
column in turbulent conditions, causing a loss of control which may
have induced severe stress on the wings. Parts of the wings were said
to have been lost before the crash.
It is also possible that the pitot head
had become frozen, thus giving a false airspeed reading, perhaps
leading to the pilot putting the aircraft into a dive which exceeded
the strength limitations of the wings.

A metal
detector search at the crash site has revealed lots of small fragments
from the Hampden. There is a gap in the hedge where the aircraft's
nose section passed through.
One
interesting piece found was an instruction plate denoting "Tanks to be
fitted or removed from wings complete with straps." It would seem that
some wing sections remained on the aircraft until the crash.
The crew
of P1294 were Flying Officer D.G.Kerr, Sergeant I.M. Williams,
Sergeant D.Tatton and Sergeant H.Playforth. |