VH-UJH de Havilland D.H.60G Gipsy Moth
(c/n 983)
Thus far I have been unable to glean any
uncropped shots of this aircraft. The above photo is
from the M.D. Cobcroft
collection, whilst the lower two are from the Fairfax archives, via the
NLA.
The
picture above shows Miss Irene Dean-Williams
(center),
her mother, Mrs. Selina Mathilda
Dean-Williams and
Harry "Cannonball"
Baker, Miss Dean-Williams' West Australia Aero Club
flying instructor. The shot was probably taken at Tammin,
W.A. on 1 May 1932 where Irene had
just landed
in her Moth after completing a
trans-Australian solo record breaking flight for a woman
aviator.
The Fairfax archives shots below were taken on 23 April 1932, probably
at Adelaide and
possibly while she was
positioning for the record
flight. VH-UJH had been sold to her by Baker
Aviation Co in March
of 1932. Her
mother had been flown out from Maylands to
meet her by
Mr. Baker in a club Moth.
Due to bad
weather she did not
complete her solo flight to Maylands
until the following
day.
'Berlei', manufacturers of women's
undergarments, were her sponsor.
-UJH became a RACWA club
aircraft itself in 1937 and
was then sold to a
private party in Kalgoorlie
before passing to the
Western Australian
Goldfields Aero Club, also
of that city. It was impressed into
service during WW II
as A7-77.