VH-BBZ (1) Avro 652A Anson 1
These two rare images (above and below) are from the Geoff
Goodall collection and
show VH-BBZ
following a crash at
Kerowagi, Papua New Guinea
in May of 1949.
Geoff provides
the background history on VH-BBZ, viz:
The Anson was ex RAAF DJ177, sold by Commonwealth
Disposals Commission at their Anson sales
at RAAF Maryborough, Qld on
4 November 1946 to Harry Ellis, Shermans Motors, Dubbo NSW.
It was not collected by
purchaser until April 1947 and never left Maryborough, being acquired
by a
local mechanic there, Joe
Vine. Joe did the CofA conversion and it was registered VH-BBZ in July
1948 to Joseph C. Vine
trading as Air Maintenance of Maryborough. On the Registration
Appli-
cation forms to DCA Joe
wrote "to be based in New Guinea", indicating he already had a purchaser
for the Anson.
In September 1948 came a change of ownership to Ben Hall of Madang who
traded
as Halls Charters and Sepik
River Trading Co, equipped with Dragons. Qantas Empire
Airways was
buying out the small
operators in New Guineas at the time and bought out Ben Hall, who
handed
VH-BBZ over to
QEA on 4 February 1949. (Surely the only Anson ever owned by
Qantas!). On
11 May 1949 -BBZ crashed on takeoff
from Kerowagi, New Guinea: swung off the runway during
a
downwind takeoff and the undercarriage struck a drain and
collapsed. Pilot Neville Mitchell who
had flown the Anson
previously for Ben Hall received minor injuries. He went on
to set up Mitchell
Aerial Services at Cairns
in the 1950s. A surprising number of Ansons were employed
in the harsh
conditions of New
Guinea in the 1940s and 1950s. Surprising, that
is, considering what damage the
extremely humid
climate could do to this wooden airframe, not mention
the termites. Many (most)
of the strips were
undeveloped and it is to the
Anson's credit that they were able to provide a modicum
of
air service to these remote outposts at all.