VH-AFR de
Havilland D.H.60G Gipsy Moth (c/n ?)
Why does this
D.H.60G have such a "late" registration? i.e. it should
have been a VH-U-- should
it not? The reason is, until the fall of 1945
it had always been a military machine. It was purposely
built by Larkin Aircraft Supply Co as A7-49, one of a batch which were
used as trainers by the RAAF
before WW II.. Their
c/ns are not really known. It was sold at the end of the war by
Commonwealth
Disposals Commission for 125
pounds to experienced aviator Jack Hodder, then at Essendon who later
set up a maintenance business at Parkes, NSW specialising in older type
aircraft. -AFR had several
owners before crashing on landing
at Kerang, Victoria on 24 January 1950 The shot from my
collection
(above) was outside the de
Havilland of Australia plant at Bankstown in 1949. The
photo immediately
below (The Collection p1234-0046) shows -AFR at Essendon in
March 1949. Finally, Geoff Goodall's
picture at the foot of the page is
a
take-off of an official photogrsph. The wrecks
of -AFR and Moth
-UFV were later acquired
by Tony Fisher and stored on a farm at Jerilderie NSW for
many years until
acquired in 1978 by
Jim Starr who
is rebuilding -UFV to fly.