VH-ULK (as
G-EBLE) Handley Page W.9a Hampstead
(c/n
W9/1)
After its days with Imperial
Airways were done in August of 1929, the one and only H.P. W.9
was shipped out
to Salamaua, New Guinea for the Ellyou Goldfields Development
Corporation
Ltd. Registered VH-ULK, it was named "City of New York". I
do not really like showing these
ancient
VH-U types in their previous identities, but I probably have Buckley's*
chance of securing
an image of it as -ULK inasmuch as the poor old thing
crashed into Mount Misim on a flight from
Salamaua
to Wau, New Guinea on 30 June 1930. Clearly its altitude
experience
on the London
to Paris
flights of
1925-29 were not nearly up to coping with the requirements for
operating in the
highlands
of New Guinea.
* In my days in the state of
Victoria there existed, on Bourke Street in Melbourne, a large
department
store named Buckley's and Nunn. This gave rise to the local
rhyming slang axiom "You've got two
chances, mate, Buckley's and
Nunn", meaning slim or no chance. (Other states prefer the
explanation
for
Buckley's chance as being derived from adventures of escaped colonial
convict William Buckley).