Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

 

Spitfire to be dug from Inishowen bog 23.06.11

by Linda McGrory

A SPITFIRE fighter plane that crashed in an Inishowen bog during WWII is to be excavated next week with the help of an Army bomb disposal team.
The plane was piloted by an American who parachuted from the aircraft before it ditched at Glenshinney bog, Moneydarragh, on the Inishowen peninsula in November 1941.
The pilot, believed to be Roland 'Bud' Wolf, was subsequently held for two years at the Curragh detention camp amid a diplomatic row between the Irish and British governments.
Locals in the rural area are preparing themselves for next Tuesday’s operation involving the defence forces, gardai, archaeologists and haulage lorries. The excavation is being undertaken as part of a BBC programme.
The plane was carrying ammunition and up to seven Browning machine guns when it crashed.
Defence forces spokesman, Commandant Neil Nolan, yesterday said the bomb disposal unit was being deployed to make safe any live munitions. "A bomb disposal team will attend when the plane is dug out, to ensure that any ordinance or munitions that were on board the aircraft, don't pose a threat to public safety," said Cmdt Nolan.
"They will check the weapon systems to make sure they are not loaded or if they are loaded, to unload them and make them safe. They will check the condition of the munitions because, despite the fact that ordinance might have been buried for many years, it can still be live or active and can still pose a threat to public safety."
It is understood 'Bud' Wolf was recruited to fly Spitfires in Northern Ireland and was based at RAF Eglinton in Co Derry.
It is thought his plane suffered a coolant leak but the Nebraska native managed to bail out before it crashed.
A Buncrana garda spokesman yesterday said there may be traffic restrictions between Redcastle and Gleneely for the operation that will begin at first light on June 28. The excavation team, who found the plane in the last few weeks using metal detectors, are expected to be in the area for three days. It is understood the plane will then be taken to Derry to be cleaned and conserved for future display.
Tommy Lafferty (72) from Moneydarragh, who was just over two years old when the plane went down, recently helped pinpoint its location.
As a child,he remembered locals going out to see where the plane crashed. "They used metal detectors to find it and they think it's about 17 feet below the moss. They'll have a fair bit of digging to do," he said. And while he has "no interest in items of war", curiosity will bring him out next week to see the plane raised after 70 years from its peaty grave.
Add to Favorites :: Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home