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FREIGHTER NAVIGATOR: Watch as retired Freighter navigator Kerry O'Brien gets a peek inside the cockpit of a Bristol Freighter for the first time in 50 years.
Spoiler alert - he loved it!
The RNZAF's Bristol Freighters were the backbone of transport operations from the early 1950s until the mid 1970s and they saw extensive service in Southeast Asia, including Vietnam and the Malayan Emergency.
Kerry is a Vitenam War veteran and a volunteer guide at our museum on Fridays - so come along for a Freighter Friday and ask him anything you like about life aboard the mighty Bristol!
From Rebecca, reliability to drift sights, he can describe #vietnamwarv#bristolfreighterl#RNZAFter #rnzaf ... See MoreSee Less
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Good one Kerry! 🤪🙄
Brilliant memories Kerry, The B170 was an icon in the RNZAF and it served the Air Force well over it's many years of service.
Wow, the last time I saw one of those Bristol Freighters, was when I was living in Singapore in the mid-1970s … FYI my late father used to work aboard said Bristol Freighter over Malaysia( and I still have the official photos to prove it!!)
Gidday Kerry. Nice to be re-educated on how things worked. I have many fond memories of flying with you on that aircraft. Den Monti
Such a great asset to the Team (Kerry, that is, not just the Freighter). 😎
Brilliant
Awesome he can tell a few amazing stories 😀
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RAID ON WUPPERTAL: The night of 29/30 May 1943 was a grim one for New Zealand crews serving in Bomber Command.
That night, 719 aircraft took off for a raid on the industrial area of Wuppertal in Germany, and 36 aircraft were lost.
A total of 21 Kiwi aviators were killed that night aboard 11 of the aircraft. No. 75 (NZ) Squadron took part in the raid and lost 12 crew aboard four Stirling bombers.
Another four New Zealanders survived crashes to be taken prisoner.
The Wuppertal attack was one of the heaviest raids of the war to that point and the incendiaries that were dropped created a firestorm that claimed an estimated 2500 lives on the ground.
The men lost were: Sergeant Robert Albert Francis Woods, 21; Pilot Officer Alfred William Flack, 29; Flight Sergeant John Ernest Clarke, 27; Sergeant Horton Neilson Wade, 30; Sergeant Donald Percy Strong, 24; Pilot Officer Raymond Frederick Bennett, 29; Flight Sergeant Raymond Fraser Norman, 23; Warrant Officer Stanley Leo Kavanagh,24; Flying Officer Kenneth Trevor Estcourt, 28; Sergeant Lionel Fairfax Furner Johns, 23; Flying Officer John Vernon Gustofson, 34; Flight Sergeant Arthur Holdsworth Smith, 32; Flight Sergeant Sydney Russell Thornley, 25; Sergeant Allan McWilliam, 20; Sergeant Allan Corson Anderson MacPhail, 30; Flying Officer Richard Barry Vernazoni, 20; Sergeant Owen Alfred Innes, 34; Flying Officer Charles Hudson Riddle, 21; Flight Sergeant John Henry Roy Carrey, 27; Flight Sergeant Norman Alexander MacLeod, 26.
Early the next morning a young Kiwi Spitfire pilot, Flying Officer George John Moorhead, 21, was killed when his aircraft crashed in the sea, ending a wretched 24 hours of losses.
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
📸A No. 75 Squadron Stirling bomber.
📸Images from the Andrew Albert Haydon personal collection.
No. 15 Squadron target photo of Wuppertal, Germany.
Haydon's log book records this aircraft as Stirling BK818. ... See MoreSee Less
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My late father in law was a navigator in this raid. I think, in Lancaster.
I understand this happened 31 May 1943? Are you sure on your dates?
My step father, Frank Norris was a pilot on Sterlings
PO Raymond Bennett is my great uncle. Got some photos of his. Flight book and cap. 2 in the photo are 2 of the survivors I believe
Lest we forget 🇳🇿 Respect 🇳🇿 R.I.P the fallen 🇳🇿
Lest we forget
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MYSTERY AIRCRAFT COMPETITION: Correctly identify these three aircraft parked at an RNZAF station some time in the 1940s and you can go in the draw to win an Air Force Museum of New Zealand coffee mug.
Good luck - it is not as easy as you may think!
To enter, put your answers in the comments below, or, if you want to keep your powder dry, email communications@airforcemuseum.co.nz for a confidential service.
The winner will be drinking tea or coffee out of a beautiful Air Force Museum of New Zealand roundel mug - they're round with roundel#mysteryaircraftc#RNZAFr#rnzafstationhobsonvillev#rnzafstationwigramigram ... See MoreSee Less
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Well I say they are Aeroplanes
Griffon engined Spitfire, Mitsubishi A6M3 model 22, CAC Wirraway (license built North American NA-33, the under cowling air intake is a give away).
Seafire, Zero, Harvard and two RNZAF personnel checking out the Zero...lol
Spitfire, Zero, Wirraway!
SEAfire, not a Spitfire, the A6M Zero now in the Auckland museum, and a Harvard
Spitfire, Zero and Harvard but let’s not talk about the hard earned war trophy that was sent home and then destroyed?? 😕
Seafire, Zero and Harvard at Hobsonville
My partner tells me they're a Spitfire, a Zero and a Texan AT6/Harvard 🤗
Tom,Dick and Harry
Spitfire, Zero, Harvard
Spitfire, zero and Brewster Buffalo 🦬
Spit, zero and Texan AT6. Zero might be the question mark. Out of place.
VA Supermarine Seafire Mk XV (likely SW853 AC-F), Mitsubishi A6M3 Type 0, "NZ6000" (now at Auckland War Memorial Museum), North American AT-6 Harvard. Was this at Hobsonville?
Spitfire, zero and a harvard?
From left to right: spitfire, zero, P-36
My immediate reaction was spitfire, zero, and Harvard but given its meant to be hard im likely wrong
Hobsonville. My guess as the zero was there for a while
Three Mosquitos.
Left to right seafire Zero NZ6001, Harvard. The location is Hobsonville Station. For Mark, in the British Commonwealth the T6 was called Harvard, and the C47 Dakota
What's a Zero doing at Wigram Airforce base years ago I didn't hear about that a Japanese Zero visit Wigram years ago ?
Thats the FAA Seafire left behind by a Brit carrier. Sadly she was broken up n scrapped. However two lost over board in Gulf.
Cessna 152, Piper Cub, and a Piper Tomahawk with the engine removed.
Old aeroplanes , now where's my coffee ☕ cup
For pity's sake what is a "Harvard" (other than a university)? That's a T-6 Texan. You Kiwis are always coming up with different names. Next you'll be telling me that a C-47 isn't a "Skytrain."
I will leave for the experts but my guess spitfire mkv, fw190 and harvard, all these could be parked at Omaka today lol
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