PH-AJU Douglas DC-2-115A
(c/n 1317)
This was the first DC-2 assembled by
Fokker in August of 1934 (for more on the history
of the
Fokker/Douglas relationship, see my entry for PH-AKF).
It arrived in Holland with
the US registration NC14284. It became, of course, KLM's
famous "Uiver" which was
flown to
second place in the MacRobertson Air Race. This event took place
in October
of
1934 and was a handicapped air race between London and Melbourne.
The race was
won
by the purpose-built de Havilland D.H.88 Comet, but when one considers
that the
DC-2 was
a stock airliner, it can be deduced just how advanced the aircraft was
for its
day. The three shots on this page illustrate the original
PH-AJU. The one at the foot of the
page comes from
the Robert Blaikie collection and was taken by his uncle Frank W.
Paltridge
in
November 1934 when the DC-2 spent some days at Brisbane's Archerfield
Airport after
the race and prior to flying back to Holland. Robert remembers
the occasion when his uncle
took him out to Archerfield to view this "huge plane". He recalls
standing under the nose and
looking
up in wonder!. PH-AJU was unfortunately destroyed in a crash at
Rutbah Wells, Iraq
on 20 December
1934
after it had been struck by lightning.
In 1983 an ex US Navy
R2D-1
BuA9993 (c/n 1404) which had
been civilianized as NC39165
was restored as
PH-AJU and shipped to
Antwerp. It then flew
from Mildenhall to Melbourne
in
commemoration of the 1934 air
race. This machine is
still flying the air show circuit in Europe
and images of it abound on
the Internet.