This Mossie PR.41
was purchased ex RAAF A52-319 by WA pioneer airline pilot Jimmy Woods
in September 1953
ostensibly to enter in the 1954 London-Christchurch Air
Race. He ferried it
from RAAF
Amberley to Perth on 10 September 1953, its only flight as a civil
aircraft. Unfortunately
Woods was
unable to secure sufficient sponsorship to continue with his plans to
enter the race and
the Mosquito was a
non-starter. It was registered in his Woods Airways series as
VH-WAD for the
ferry flight,
being a follow-on sequence of his Ansons VH-WAB and -WAC which were, at
the time,
used on his
regularly scheduled flights between Perth and Rottnest Island.
The Mosquito was named
'The
Quokka' after the small animals of that name indigenous to
Rottnest Island. The shot above was
taken at Perth
Airport in May 1964 by Mike Madden (via the Geoff Goodall collection).
The Mosquito was stored in hangars at Perth Airport until 1963 when it
was parked in an open enclosure
with retired
Aeronavale Lancaster WU-16. The weather quickly took its toll on
the Mosquito's wooden
airframe, and
by the time Geoff took the photograph (below) in 1968 it had been
towed to a secluded
corner of the
airport and left to rot. It was eventually saved by a Perth
aircraft dealer who sold it in the
United States.
However, the aircraft was badly damaged during dismantling and storage
in Perth before
suffering
the ignominy of being off-loaded from a cargo vessel
at Port Melbourne in May 1972 due to
monies being owed
while being shipped from Perth to California. At a
later auction it was acquired by
the Australian War
Memorial who commissioned a lengthy rebuild, and today it is displayed
at the AWM
in RAAF
postwar silver scheme as A52-319. Phil Vabre took a shot of it in
June 2010. Below, foot of
page.