VH-UVT de
Havilland D.H. 89 Dragon Rapide
(c/n 6319)
I have several
images of this Rapide, and none of them are exactly
brilliant! Seen above is a shot
of
it at Adelaide in 1936 shortly after being registered to its first
owner, Adelaide Airways. (Photo
courtesy of the Civil Aviation Historical Society, via Phil Vabre).
The shot below is a side view,
circa the same period. Shortly after (in November 1936) Adelaide
Airways became part of the
ANA
system and the Rapide was repainted and named 'Monana'. On 30 June 1937
VH-UVT
crashed
at Mount Gambier, SA after it struck a windmill and the
roof of a hangar during landing
while attempting to avoid cows and rough ground. The
wreckage was trucked to Melbourne and
stored
for parts by ANA. When the airline lost most of its fleet to RAAF
impressments in 1940,
-UVT was resurrected in a mammoth rebuilding project in the ANA
workshops at Essendon and
testflown in April 1941 with new name 'Memma'.
Photograph No 3, from the Geoff Goodall
collection shows the extent of the damage sustained in that crash,
while No 4 is another Goodall
shot showing it tail up on a trestle at Cairns, circa 1941. The
machine was based in Cairns during
WW II
and was engaged in evacuating civilians from New Guinea
after Japanese attacks. It remain-
ed in
North Queensland until 1950 when ANA sold it to Butler Air
Transport. Image No 5 is
another
Civil Aviation Historical Society shot showing -UVT in ANA service (at
Flinders Island,
circa
1947?) with no name at all.
Finally, my shot (No 6) shows it outside
DHA's hangar at
Bankstown in
1950 having been overhauled for Butler. It
finished up with
Connellan Airways at
Alice
Springs where its CofA expired in
November1954 and it was scrapped, being considered
uneconomical to renew.
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