VH-CFA(2) de Havilland D.H.89A Dragon Rapide
(c/n 6713)
This photograph was sent to me by Chris
Bampton whose father, Dick Bampton was sadly
killed
when the aircraft crashed into the sea off Brooke Island, Queensland on
26 October
1953. He was on a flight for the Queensland Aerial
Ambulance service at the time and the
following
narrative is kindly given by Chris:
"The Aerial
ambulance was called out to Iron Range on Cape York to collect a
patient, an aboriginal
stockman who had been bitten by a snake. My father was one of half a
dozen ANA pilots who were
rostered
to fly the Ambulance plane as needed for the Cairns Ambulance. On board
as well was an
ambulance bearer. My father took off fairly late from Iron Range, and
was confronted by very low
thick
cloud north of Cairns. The Rapide was only VFR nor IFR and my father
could not get a fix on
Cairns.
He was redirected further south . My knowledge of the accident is
sketchy- when I wrote to
the CAA
(DCA) a few years ago, I was told that the investigation reports had
been destroyed in a fire
or
otherwise lost. He apparently ran out of fuel north of
Hinchinbrook Is and landed the aircraft on
the
water near Brooke Is. The ambulance bearer was uninjured and got out
okay, along with my
father
who had some leg injuries. The stockman went down with the plane which
did not float for long.
Apparently my father survived for some
time in the water but was unable to stay afloat due to his
injuries. He was not wearing a life jacket. The ambulance bearer was
picked up hours later by a
passing coastal freighter. Neither my fathers's body nor any parts of
the plane were ever found."
This VH-CFA is the
second aircraft to bear this registration. The first was another
Rapide, ex
G-AKOC which
went to Australia in 1949. This, the second VH-CFA, was ex G-ALNT
(formerly HG728 with
the RAF) and was exported in 1952.