Hi everyone,
I have some sad news today. Over the weekend a beautifully restored 1936 Fairchild 24 C8E crashed shortly after take-off from Langley Airport, BC.
The airplane in question is owned by Geoff and Bruce Guest who spent the last many years restoring her. This year at the Arlington Airshow it won Antique Reserve Grand Champion, which makes this accident even harder to swallow.
Another part of the story is that this exact airplane had a significant connection with the Guest family. Off the top of my head I can't remember exactly how, but as it goes a family member of theirs (father or grandfather) was a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and when the RCMP purchased this exact airplane brand new, this family member was responsible for picking it up from the factory on the back east (Can't think of exactly where) and he flew it across Canada; all the way to British Columbia. He then flew the airplane in BC for many years doing his RCMP duties. Eventually the airplane was retired from the RCMP and entered civilian use.
Some time later, Geoff and Bruce Guest looked into where the airplane had ended up and they discovered it still existed, and was owned by a gentleman in the United States. They contacted the owner and purchased it, then began their long restoration.
I actually had the pleasure of watching their progress over the years because I was a glider pilot with the Air Cadet program and we flew out of Langley Airport, where they worked on the plane in their hangar. On my lunch breaks I'd often find their hangar door open and I would poke my head in to see how they were getting along with their project.
It is very sad to see what happened to the airplane and hope that it will return to the air one day. The outlook for that is quite bleak considering the damage it sustained, but anything is possible, right?
The article (with picture) is below:
http://www.canada.com/langleyadvance/ne ... 25b10098b4
The article says they failed to make an emergency landing, but in my books the pilot did the best he could given his circumstances and altitude to work with, AND since both occupants were able to walk away from it, I'd say it was a D*MN GOOD emergency landing. Obviously hitting the trees complicated things.
Anyways, I apologize for any inaccuracies in this story, but I'm writing it from memory. If I didn't get all the facts right, please fill them in so that this story doesn't go on with mis-information.
-David M.