VH-UTH GAL Monospar
ST.12
(c/n ST12/36)
In 1930 the
Monospar Wing Company was established in the U.K. to build a new wing
design to
Air Ministry
specifications. This new wing was installed in a three seat
monoplane known as the
Monospar ST.3.
Success of
this
prototype led to the formation of
the General Aircraft Company
to build aircraft utilizing this
new wing
construction methodology. The ST.12 illustrated above was
one of
these. VH-UTH was imported in 1935 and operated by New England
Airways,
Ltd. out of
Sydney, who named it 'Captain
Cook'. This image of it in that livery appears
above and is courtesy
of the John Oxley Library, State
Library of Queensland collection. The historic photo (# 2) immed-
iately below from Bruce
Robinson shows his grandfather with Capt. Keith Virtue and two other
worthies with the machine
When Airlines of Australia was formed in
January 1936 from New
England Airways, the Monospar
passed to the asset register of the new company. A rare shot of
it in AOA's dark blue livery is
seen at photo #3, also courtesy of Bruce's collection. My
photograph,
(# 4
below) was taken twenty years
later at Moorabbin (June, 1955).
Immediately below that (#
5)
is
a rare shot showing the aircraft with the tail
stripes of the Tasmanian Aero Club in
Launceston in
1949. Rare, inasmuch as the
club only owned the
aircraft for a short
while. It was
also owned for
a short time by Doug Fawcett's
Illawarra
Flying School
at Bankstown, NSW, as portrayed in
image
# 6. from the Geoff Goodall
collection. The final color shot (# 7) is from the David
Eyre
collection
and shows the Monospar at
Bankstown in 1958. It was owned at the time by Dr. John Morris
(of
Forestville NSW), who flew
it from Australia to the
U.K in 1961. It now resides at the Newark Air
Museum, Winthorpe, Notts., U.K.
2.
3.
4.
5.
.
6.
7.