VH-AAZ (2) de
Havilland D.H.83 Fox
Moth
(c/n 4089)
When, in late 1937 the
Asiatic Petroleum Company decided to have its Grumman Goose shipped
directly to, and registered
in, the Dutch East Indies, the rego VH-AAZ to which it had been
assigned
was
quickly reissued - to this Fox Moth. This aircraft was operated
by pioneering aviator and New
Guinea gold miner Ray Parer
and was imported from the U.K. ex G-ACRU. As such it
had been
owned by
the Royal Aeronautical Society, London and operated on floats for The
British Graham
Land
Expedition 1934-1937, flying in Antarctica and the Falkland Islands. It
was first registered in
Australia on 20 November 1937 and flown from Wewak
by Parer carrying supplies and miners to
their diggings, as well freight
and passengers between Wau and Salamaua. It had a hard
life with
several accidents before being wrecked at Black Cat
Range on 6 November 1939 en route from
Salamaua to Wau when
treacherous weather forced the pilot Bill Forgan-Smith into tree
tops. He
was injured but trekked through
thick forest for days until rescued, later going on to a long airline
career
with Qantas. The above image is from the Geoff Goodall collection
and is a take-off from
the official CofA
photograph.