On a trip to Mull in 2008, I climbed to the summit of Ben More to look for the remains of a Bristol Beaufort that crashed in 1942. I was unable to find anything but have discovered subsequently that the wreckage lies slightly to the north of the summit, in the northern corrie of Ben More at OS grid. ref. NM 525335. At the Mull Museum in Tobermory, there is some information about this crash and some wreckage parts from the Bristol Beaufort, along with information and parts from another crash on the island, a Douglas C-47 Dakota which crashed on Beinn Talaidh in 1945. See photos below. |
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More information and photographs (including one showing the remains of the tail rotor asembly at the crash site) are on the ACSS website here. Stuart Whittaker sent me a photograph of the scar left on the slopes of Ben More by the crash of the Wessex (see photo to the right). This photo was taken sometime in the summer of 1991, and it is possible that this scar is still visible on the mountain. There is a memorial on the summit of Ben Ledi, about 20km to the south-east of Ben More, to a member of the Killin Mountain Rescue Team killed in the Wessex crash. There is a news article on the BBC website about this crash here. In July 2010 I visited the Cornalees Visitor Centre in Clyde Muirshiel Regional Park. There is a radial Cheetah engine in the car park of the visitors centre (see photos below) from an Avro Anson that crashed on the nearby Dunrod Hill in 1939. The other engine remains on the hill above the car park. The ACSS website has some information and photos of this site here. |
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Personal correspondence from Dave Priestley claims that this is the remains of a de Havilland Vampire (VV636 from RAF Leuchars 229 OCU) that impacted near the Carlin Maggie rock formation below the summit of Bishop Hill on 02/02/51, although I have been unable to find out any further information about this - a list of Vampire crashes here does not seem to list this crash, although the aircraft is listed as crashing on Bishop Hill here. However, personal correspondence from both Neil Daniel and Alan Thomson claim that this wreckage is in fact main wing spar parts from a Hawker Hind (K6819 of 603 Squadron) which crashed here on 18/02/39. Hawker manufacturer stamps found by Neil Daniel on the wreckage, and the fact that the wreckage does not seem to bear any similarities to the de Havilland Vampire wreckage in the Lammermuir Hills to the south of Edinburgh (see my page about this site here), would seem to support this. Personal correspondence from Charles Pease also confirms this wreckage is from a Hawker Hind - he writes: "I think that you will find that the wreckage is from the Hawker Hind K6819 from the 603 City of Edinburgh Squadron and piloted by my half-cousin, Ingram Edward Pease 1914-1939. He crashed in bad visibility and the local papers carried some commentary about the events of the 18th of February 1939, when it happened. Ingram was taken back to Yorkshire and in buried at St. Oswald's Church, Newton under Roseberry, between Guisborough and Great Ayton." Charles also sent me some images of press clippings about the crash which can be seen here. Personal correspondence from Gary Nelson has informed me that there is more wreckage to the north of the Hawker Hind wreckage which may be from the Vampire. Photos he took of both sites can be seen on his website here and here.
Also, one of the remote eastern corries of Beinn a'Ghlo above Loch Loch is apparently known locally as 'Aeroplane Corrie' due to a wartime crash in the vicinity. Personal correspondence from Alan Thomson informs me that this was the crash of a de Havilland Tiger Moth (T6577 from 11 EFTS) on 22/2/1945. The site of the 1993 RAF Hercules crash is also near to Loch Loch to the east of Beinn a'Ghlo (see my page about this site here). I received personal correspondence from Tom Ward about this crash, and he informed me that he had obtained what appear to be pieces of the crashed Hunter at an auction in Perth in 2019. The pieces had a label attached which read: "Remains of plane which crashed into Shinigag side of Carn Leath near the witches rock. About Sept 1968? Pilot killed." This information fits in with the area I was searching although what 'witches rock' refers to is still unknown, and the year of the crash is incorrect. He also sent me some photos of the pieces and the label.
A few interesting wreck sites in the Scottish mountains have had large wreckage parts removed in recent years:
I received some personal correspondence from Ian Mckellar about this site. Ian was a member of the RAF Kinloss mountain rescue team and was involved in the cleanup operation after this crash. He states that the Hunter crashed into a rock, causing a large fracture in the rock (presumably where the memorial is now). There is some more information about this crash here, here and here.
Beyond Scotland - I climbed Snowdon in Wales in April 2010 via the Watkin Path on the south side of the mountain. This path goes through the Cwm Llan and not far from the path near the old workings of the Hafod y Llan mine at an altitude of 400m lie a small amount of remains of a Mosquito that crashed in the Cwm in 1948 (see photos below, OS grid. ref. SH 61099 52985). There are other small pieces of wreckage scattered in this area, there are some photographs of this wreckage on the 'GeoTopoi' blog here. |
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