muddyboots wrote:
How does a crash site go unchecked for 70 years in England? Seems like they would have looked by now.
It's a relatively remote area on the border between England and Scotland sparsely populated and visited only by dedicated hikers.
Quote:
The young airman was the only person on board the single-seater aircraft when it crashed shortly after embarking on a training flight from Drem air base, East Lothian, which was used by the City of Glasgow 602 Squadron to guard the east coast.
An initial crash inspection in 1943 recovered parts of a uniform, dog tags and a single flight boot, which were interred at Craigton Cemetery in Glasgow, following a wartime board of inquiry.
So they looked, but not very hard it seems.
Some of the "facts" seem off. 602 sqdn were using the Mk Vc (not I) in 1943 and were based in the Orkneys which is some distance away.The only timeframe for Drem(base) and MkI Spitfires is October 1939 to April 1940 so could the crash date actually have been 194
0 but the inquiry not until 1943?