VH-UGI
Westland Widgeon III (c/n WA.1681)
The
above shot, which looks like an official CofA photograph, is from the
Len Dobbin collection,
via Phil Vabre
of the CAHS. A close up of the inscription on the
hangar door appears below,
although it does not mention
Westland aircraft. Following that the photo (image #
3, and also from
the CAHS) is
interesting in that it also shows the first control tower in
use at Mascot Airport.
VH-UGI was first
imported in 1927
and after six years in and around the Sydney area was
sold
to Sid Marshall
for operation in New Guinea. The Widgeon was originally
owned by
Milton Kent
and a shot of it as
G-AUGI is seen at
image # 5. below, courtesy of the National Library of Australia
collection. The photo was taken by
Kent himself and shows the machine in front of one of the four
garage
sized hangars that were
located between the aero club clubhouse and the Adastra hangar at
Mascot.
Milton went on to
acquire another Widgeon (G-AUHU) some nine months later. Anyway,
in 1937 VH-UGI
returned to the Sydney area when Sid set up his Marshall Airways.
Its C of A
was not renewed
during WW
II and in 1947 it was stricken
off the register. It then languished for
some 40 years in the
back of one of Sid's hangars. Photograph # 4 below was taken by
the late
Peter Simon
(via the Geoff Goodall collection) in 1965. Note
the ambulance maltese cross emblem
which
was painted on all Marshall aircraft when they were
used on aerial ambulance
flights. Happily
this venerable
Widgeon was later rebuilt to
airworthy condition. It then went through
an extensive
restoration and is
currently the only example left still
airworthy. It now resides at
owner Dick Smith's
farm near
Canberra. Finally, at the foot of the page (# 6) is a
fairly contemporary (2005) photo of
-UGI taken by
Ken Tilley at the Smith's
estate.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.