VH-UOG General Aircraft
Genairco
(c/n 16)
The General Aircraft Company Ltd was
formed in the late 1920s at Mascot, NSW for the purpose
of manufacturing light aircraft
of
Australian design Two designs were produced, the Genairco
Cabin
and the
Genairco Open, also known as the Genairco
Moth. This latter was a conventional single-bay
biplane
with the fuselage based on the D.H.60 Moth and the wings based on those
of the Avro
Avian.
The
fuselage, however, was wider than that of the Moth and allowed for two
side by side
passengers
in the
front. Only 10 Genaircos were built; -11 if
you include the seaplane completed by
Tugan.
VH-UOG was delivered on 2
June 1930 with a 105
hp Harkness Hornet
engine, which was replaced
five
months later with a 130 hp Gipsy Major Mk. II. Photo No 2, from
the Frank Walters collection,
shows the Genairco at Mascot sometime in the early 1930s (no data on
the diamond on the rudder).
Image No 3*, taken
from an article appearing in the
Sydney Morning Herald for 21 November 1930,
shows well the
wider
forward fuselage.
The caption
indicates that the Governor of NSW was hand-
ing over this
'First
Australian-built
Moth to the Aero
Club' Not true on two counts. The
first Genairco
was
VH-UNC and VH-UOG
never did see service
with the NSW Aero Club. However, for ribbon
cutting
purposes this, clearly, was near enough!
Actually, -UOG later
became Goya Henry's well
known aircraft
when his legal actions against the
Commonwealth resulted in a complete change in
adminis-
tering the rules of the air in Australia. Photos Nos. 4 and 5
from
the Hood collection, via the State Library
of NSW show the aircraft
when owned by
Henry and named 'Jolly Roger'
Item # 6* is an extract from
the Sydney
Morning Herald of 28 February 1945
detailing its sale by auction. 390 quid in those
days
was a
substantial sum. Clearly Cpl Griffiths was
either a man of some means or the RAAF paid its
enlisted men awfully
well! Image No. 7 is
from the Geoff Goodall
collection and shows VH-UOG in
western NSW
during the 1950s. By
1956 this aircraft was owned by Oscar Roche of Tottenham
NSW, who also had the Genairco VH-UOD, and he flew
it until it was retired in
1964. It was then
stored at Tottenham until
acquired by Joe Drage who transported it
to his
newly established Drage's
Historic Aircraft
Collection on a farm at Wodonga Victoria. When the
Wangaratta
City Council, or
forefathers, or
whatever, elected to sell off
this historic collection
of aircraft, VH-UOG was sold to
Roy Fox in NSW
who,
hopefully, will have it restored to health one of
these days!
*
Newspaper articles researched and unearthed by Graeme Parsons of
Sydney.
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