Plane crashes
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I can remember a couple of crashes of planes other than our own.
I saw two Lightning aircraft, now that's an American fighter,
quite a sophisticated aircraft for its time.
It had two booms and a wing and a fuselage section. Two of them
landed close together on our strip. It didn't appear, I was a
couple hundred metres away, three hundred metres away, when
they, the second one crashed into the first one. It didn't
appear to do too much damage or hit too hard, but the pilot in
the first aircraft must've been knocked unconscious, because the
aircraft caught on fire he didn't get out. On another occasion I
saw a, a Bolingbroke aircraft coming in on one engine and as he
was about to land he cut the power on his one engine and lost
control at that point. We had two Dakotas sitting at the end of
the strip facing the strip and he crashed into them, killed him.
He was killed the pilot, or the fighter, and also one of our
people was sitting in the shade underneath the wing of one of our
aircraft, he was killed. And the fire crash truck came out of
course, we did have crash trucks, and we did have foam, because
the fire department started to spray foam, the crash crew onto
the mess that was happening and the ammunition started going
off including a hole in the hose behind the firefighter. So
anyhow, those are things you see but when you are young as I say
it's exciting and not really, it's tragic, but that's the way
it is.
Description
Mr. Duffley tells the stories of two different plane crashes at his base.
Louis Duffley
Louis Duffley was born in Quispamsis, New Brunswick on 14 February, 1920. He and some friends joined the Air Force and in 1941 travelled to Toronto for kitting and elementary discipline. From there, he went to Technical school in Belleville. He finished up in 1942 and was posted in Moncton, New Brunswick. He stayed there for a year and a half before being sent off to Dorval, Quebec for another course. After two months, Mr Duffley joined the 165 Squadron on the West Coast. Eventually, in 1944 he and two Air Force friends were sent overseas.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:00
- Person Interviewed:
- Louis Duffley
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Burma
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 436 Squadron
- Occupation:
- Aircraft Instrument Engineer
Related Videos
- Date modified: