JohnB wrote:
One survives in the UK Army museum...as do a few airframe sections.
Just to be clear, there are several British army (and regimental) museums, as Aeronut has referred to, it's in the Museum of Army Flying, which is at the delightfully named Middle Wallop, Hampshire, off the A303.
JohnB wrote:
There are some replicas out there, several were made for the film A Bridge too Far.
Got me thinking, I'm not aware that any of the
Bridge too Far replicas survive, but I may be wrong. Likewise most of what survives is either original or based on original parts, rather than ground up replica with some fittings type of thing. There are other surviving cockpit sections - one at Duxford, and (IIRC) another at Middle Wallop with the complete example.
The aircraft was designed by Airspeed, and widely built by cabinet and furniture manufactures. Because of the close relationship between Airspeed and de Havilland, there is (I believe, still) a fuselage on show at the de Havilland Heritage Museum, at London Colney, north of London.
The Horsa (named after an ancient English hero, as were the other gliders - Hotspur, Hengist, Hadrian for the Waco CG-4 and Hamilcar*) was significantly larger and in many ways more versatile / capable than the excellent but smaller, simpler and less robust Waco CG-4. It's not often realised how much the evolution of the military glider changed in concept and utilisation in a few short years, all really kicked off by the German success in May 1940 with the small DFS 230. The Horsa was initially expected to have paratroops jump from doors on both sides, and was also equipped with bomb-bays!
After the war, Horsas were sold as temporary houses, not that odd, given the acute shortage of houses in bombed Britain.
The last time they were used, and the last time gliders were used in such a form (I believe) was in a major 1948(?) exercise.
According to the Wiki page, there's a replica at Pegasus Bridge, in France, as well.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airspeed_HorsaHTH!
*Ancient British heroes with names beginning with 'A - G' and 'I - Z' were just unlucky.