The People's Mosquito

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FormationMarch 7, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-03-07)
TypeNonprofit
Legal statusCharity
PurposeTo restore a de Havilland Mosquito to airworthy condition
Websitepeoplesmosquito.org.uk

The People's Mosquito is a charity based in the United Kingdom which aims to restore a de Havilland Mosquito, serial RL249, to airworthiness, which would make it the first UK-built Mosquito in over 70 years.[1]

History[edit]

RL249 was a night fighter Mosquito outfitted with a Mk.X radar. It was one of the final Mosquitos to come off British production lines for Royal Air Force service. The aircraft was in service with 23 Squadron, based at RAF Coltishall. On 14 February 1949, Pilot Officer Richard "Dickie" Colbourne and his navigator Flight Sergeant Bert Kirby took of at 21.35 for gunnery practice at Holbeach Gunnery Range. The engines failed shortly after, and Colbourne crash landed in a copse four miles from the airfield at around 21.45. The aircraft quickly caught fire. Although dazed, and with his clothes on fire, Colbourne was able to escape the aircraft and smothered the flames on his person. He then climbed back into the still-burning aircraft and found his navigator trapped in the nose, where he had been flung by the impact. He dragged Bert free, and with the aid of a passer-by, removed his burning clothes.

The pair were transported to hospital in Norwich, where Bert died 20 hours later. As a result of his extensive injuries, Dickie remained in hospital for several months. For his actions in saving Bert, he was awarded the George Medal. The citation concluded: “Colbourne showed great fortitude, personal courage and devotion to duty under conditions of extreme danger when he was in considerable pain from his injuries.”

The accident resulted in a mechanical fix being implemented on all Mosquitos using 113/114A Rolls-Royce Merlin engines.

RL249 was removed from the copse and parked next to the perimeter track at Coltishall, where the radar, engines, and guns were salvaged. For several years the remains were used as an instructional airframe and for fire practice. In the 1960s, the airfield boundary was reduced and the runway extended. RL249 was burnt and then buried under the field.

Restoration[edit]

In 2006, the buried remains of the aircraft were rediscovered, and following negotiations, were acquired by The People's Mosquito in 2010 as the basis for their restoration project. The parts are now in storage, where they will serve as the template for the rebuild.

In August 2017, an archive of 22,300 technical drawings on aperture cards, discovered in a soon to-be-demolished building near Chester belonging to Airbus were acquired by the charity, and digitised for £4,000.[2]

In 2018, The People's Mosquito announced that Retrotec Ltd, a firm of aircraft restoration specialists, had been appointed to undertake the work of restoring RL249 to flight status. A newly-manufactured Mosquito assembly building was being prepared and work started on constructing the first moulds for the fuselage.

In March 2019, the container ship Al Dahna arrived in Southampton Water with a container from Aerowood, a woodworking company based in Napier, New Zealand. This container contained over six tonnes of jigs, fixtures, and completed wing ribs ordered by The People's Mosquito. They also acquired CAD drawings of the Mosquito from Aerowood. These were transported to the workshops of Retrotec Ltd, and unpacked. Aerowood had previously produced the wings, tail fin, rudder, horizontal tailplanes, elevators, flaps, tank bay doors and bomb bay doors for the last Mosquito FB.VI to be flown, serial number PZ474.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Operation Husky". The People's Mosquito. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  2. ^ Bruxelles, Simon de (26 May 2023). "Chance find helps Mosquito war plane fly again". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 26 May 2023.

External links[edit]

Official website