VH-ULM de
Havilland D.H.60M Moth
(c/n 1403)
The nice shot above, from the Brian Baker
collection, was taken by Peter Rickerts at Bankstown in
1962 and shows
the Metal Moth still in fairly authentic de Havilland
livery. This aircraft was first
registered in
December 1930 to the Civil Aviation Branch of the Department of Defence
as one of
the
machines loaned out to form the nucleus of the
Australian Aero Club. VH-ULM along
with its
sister VH-ULN were
the first two aircraft belonging to the
Tasmanian Section formed at
Western
Junction
Airport (my old haunt) in Launceston,
Tasmania. It was not impressed into
service during
WW II and
in 1944 went to the Royal Victorian Aero Club,
then based at
Essendon. Beginning in
1946 it had a long
succession
of owners in NSW and Victoria before being withdrawn from
active
use in
1977 and winding up with the Joe Drage's Air World
collection at Wangaratta, Victoria.
Geoff
Goodall's color shot (below) shows it at Berwick in February 1975,
flown by Joe Drage
when
visiting from Wodonga. Dr. Michael Redmond of Brisbane,
Qld
acquired -ULM in 2005
and it was
completely restored again ten years later. The nice ground-to-air
shot a the foot of the
page is by
Graham Potts (via Lindsay Millar) and was taken at Caboolture in July
2015..