VH-ADG de Havilland D.H.90
Dragonfly
(c/n 7516)
This gorgeous shot of an Airlines (W.A.) Ltd
Dragonfly comes from
the Civil Aviation Historical
society archives. It was registered for the
time, a couple of years out of sequence. (VH-AAG
would
have been nearer
the mark) but, being ex
G-AEDG retained its UK 'last two'. It was
originally
acquired in October 1937 by the
Hon. James V. Fairbarn, the then Minister for Air,
who used
it is a
private aircraft, having flown it out from England himself. The
photo at the foot
of the
page, from the Geoff Goodall collection, shows the Dragonfly as G-AEDG
just after it
arrived at Canberra with
Fairbarn on the wing The aircraft was named 'Spirit of Flinders' .
and Fairbarn flew it around Australia to
review
all the RAAF stations. Fairbarn was sadly killed
in
August of that year in the crash of a Lockheed Hudson at
Canberra). Previously, however, he
had relinquished -ADG to the
Government who in turn passed it to Airlines (WA) Ltd of Perth)
to replace
their Dragon VH-URY which had been
earmarked for impression into RAAF service.
Charles
Snook, AWA's founder, left Essendon in
July 1940 to bring -ADG back to Perth then
delivered -URY
from Perth to
the RAAF at Parafield that same month. VH-ADG was named
"Murchison" in
AWA service as can just be discerned
in the image above taken at Maylands,
Perth, in
July
1940. The Dragonfly was damaged beyond
economical repair on 1 December 1947
when it
ran off the runway and
overturned. It was operating a regular
newspaper delivery service
to Bunbury and
southwest
towns, which involved air-dropping bundles of papers. Captain
Colin
Cook and a
passenger were not injured but the dropping boy
was hurt when buried under the
bundles
of newspapers. The image immediately below, also from Geoff's
collection and shows poor
old
-ADG just after the accident.