G-ACJJ Short L.17 Scylla
(c/n S.768)
In the spring of 1933 Imperial Airways found itself
drastically short of capacity. Heavier traffic
demands coupled with
several losses due to accidents had left them short on some of their
more
lucrative runs,
particularly the London-Paris route. Handley Page were unable
(and probably
unwilling) to tool up
and produce a couple more H.P.42s and so the airline turned to Shorts
to
see if they could
produce a landplane version of the S.17 Kent flying boat.. The result
was two
ungainly biplanes,
usually referred to as the Scylla, although that happened to be the
name given
to G-ACJJ, the first, and
was not the official type name (Shorts didn't have one). Looking
more
like Spanish Galleons
under full sail they did, nevertheless provide sterling, albeit slow,
service to
Imperial Airways. The
aircraft were also used in the early days of WW II ferrying troops and
materiel to
France. G-ACJJ was damaged beyond repair in a landing accident in
1940.