VH-ULU Klemm L
25-1
(c/n 131)
This
diminutive little two seater was imported in 1929 and registered to
H.C. Ittershagen of West
Subiaco,
WA. He was the local distributor for Lanz tractors, and
told
local newspapers at the
time that he would train eight of
his tractor experts to fly the Klemm in order to provide service to
his far flung farmer customers
throughout West Australia. There was a delay in getting the
aircraft
flying because the CAB did not recognize
its German CofA . In the event it was assembled at his
private airfield at West Subiaco and
test flown on 18 August 1929 by his company pilot Harry
"Cannonball"
Baker. The above photo is from the Civil Aviation
Historical Society collection
and probably was taken circa 1929 just after the
aircraft had arrived. Baker flew -ULU to Sydney
for the
October 1929 East-West Air Race from Sydney to Perth and on arrival
back
in Perth report-
ed no mechanical failures of any
kind. In January 1930 Ittershagen had floats
fitted to ULU, and he
formed a new company, Aerial Commerce
Co, whose letterhead boasted a "Klemm
Seaplane Station,
Nedlands" on the Swan River near Perth city.
A
report from the Perth Western Mail for January
1930
indicates that
Baker made the flight from Nedlands Bay to Rottnest in
12 minutes and that a
regular service was being
proposed. The photo at the foot of the page was from
the 20 March 1930
issue of the same newspaper and shows
children congregating around the
seaplane when it visited
Mandurah earlier in that
month. In the event, the
floats were removed from the Klemm several
months
later, and it was used for
joyriding at both Perth and Rottnest Island until
1933 when it retired
to
Ittershagen's hangar at West Subiaco airfield and remained there with
Klemm
-UNG and Spartan
-UMQ until
1940. That year -ULU was
purchased by a local, and DCA investigations in October
1941
revealed that he had flown over 200 hours of local flying from the
West Subiaco aerodrome
with no pilot's
licence and that he confessed complete ignorance of
all aviation regulations. Not only
that,
but for fuel, he and his friends had stockpiled 120 gallons of
car fuel
in contravention of the war-
time fuel
rationing
regulations! The ultimate fate of the little Klemm
is unclear, but a wheel identified
as being
from -ULU
turned up in a Perth tip in 1958. The image immediately below was
taken at
Merredin,
WA while the no 3 photo shows it as a
seaplane flying from the Swan
River at Perth in Jan
1930. Both these images are
from the
Geoff Goodall collection.