Maxstoke air crash
A Handley Page O/400 similar to the accident aircraft | |
Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 19 August 1918 |
Summary | Wing Failure |
Site | Maxstoke, North Warwickshire, England, United Kingdom |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Handley Page O/400 |
Operator | Royal Air Force |
Registration | D4593 |
Flight origin | Castle Bromwich Aerodrome, England, United Kingdom |
Passengers | 1 |
Crew | 6 |
Fatalities | 7 |
Injuries | 0 |
Survivors | 0 |
The Maxstoke air crash occurred on the 19 August 1918. A No. 14 Aircraft Acceptance Park Handley Page O/400 of the Royal Air Force took off from Castle Bromwich Aerodrome.[1][2] The aircraft was taking part of a test flight, testing a dynamo and lighting system. While flying over North Warwickshire, the pilots lost control of the aircraft and crashed into a field at Maxstoke, North Warwickshire, killing all seven crew on board.[1] The pilots were Canadian Lt. Robert Edward Andrew MacBeth and Lt. Frederick James Bravery. The other crew were air mechanics. Charles William Offord was testing the dynamo and lighting system and J May was performing a rigging test. Albert J. Winrow and H. Simmons were to make up war load to pilot's instructions and G. Greenland was responsible for the petrol pumps.[1][2] MacBeth and Simmons were buried in the Maxstoke cemetery.[2]
The cause of the accident was determined to be loss of control due to wing failure when the aircraft lost fabric from a wing. It was the deadliest accident involving the Royal Air Force at the time.[1][2]
References
- ^ a b c d "Military crashes in the south west Midlands - 1918". Aviation Archaeology. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
- ^ a b c d Walpole, Michael (August 2014). "Maxstoke's silent witnesses to casualties on the home front". Coleshill Past. No. 1 (WWI Centenary ed.). The Coleshill Post. Retrieved 26 February 2017 – via Issuu.
52°28′N 1°39′W / 52.467°N 1.650°W / 52.467; -1.650
- v
- t
- e
- Jul 13, 1897 Arctic Balloon Expedition
- Feb 14, 1902 Santos-Dumont nº6 crash (Monaco)
- May 12, 1902 Pax airship disaster
- Nov 30, 1907 Patrie airship disappearance
- Sep 25, 1909 Lebaudy République airship
- Apr 24, 1910 Zeppelin LZ 5 crash
- Jul 13, 1910 Erbslöh airship crash
- May 21, 1911 Paris to Madrid air race accident
- Feb 17, 1912 Martin-Handasyde No. 3
- May 13, 1912 Brooklands Flanders Monoplane crash
- Sep 10, 1912 Bristol Coanda Monoplane crash
- Dec 15, 1912 Handley Page Type F crash
- Apr 17, 1913 Zodiac balloon accident
- Aug 7, 1913 Cody Floatplane crash
- Sep 9, 1913 Helgoland disaster
- Oct 17, 1913 Johannisthal disaster
- Aug 23, 1914 Zeppelin LZ 23 shot down
- Feb 17, 1915 Zeppelin LZ 24
- Mar 21, 1915 Zeppelin LZ 29 crash
- Jun 07, 1915 Zeppelin LZ 37 shot down
- Jun 07, 1915 Zeppelin LZ 38 shed bombardment
- Aug 10, 1915 Zeppelin LZ 43 fire
- Dec 17, 1915 Zeppelin LZ 39
- Feb 01, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 54 crash
- Feb 21, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 47
- Apr 01, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 48
- May 03, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 59 crash
- May 04, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 32
- May 05, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 55 shot down
- Sep 16, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 31
- Sep 24, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 76
- Sep 24, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 74
- Oct 02, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 72
- Nov 27, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 78 shot down
- Nov 28, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 61 shot down
- Dec 28, 1916 Zeppelin LZ 53 fire
- Mar 17, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 86
- May 14, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 64
- Jun 17, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 95 shot down
- Aug 21, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 66
- Oct 08, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 102
- Oct 20, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 85 crash
- Oct 20, 1917 Zeppelin LZ 89 crash
- Dec 14, 1917 C.26 crash
- Apr 07, 1918 Zeppelin LZ 104
- Aug 06, 1918 Zeppelin LZ 112
- Aug 11, 1918 Zeppelin LZ 100
- Aug 19, 1918 Maxstoke air crash
- May 26, 1919 Tarrant Tabor
- Jul 15, 1919 Airship N.S.11 crash
- Jul 21, 1919 Wingfoot Air Express crash
- Aug 2, 1919 Verona Caproni Ca. 48 crash
- For single-person aviation accidents see:
Aviators killed in early aviation accidents