
Originally Posted by
wwrsimon
Hello
AC1 Wallace LOCKERBIE - 993571 - he was a victim of the Hurricane collision over Lincoln.The Lincolnshire Echo of July 30th 1941 reported the following:
Airmen Did Not Know They Were Over Lincoln: Inquest on Crash Victims
Questions about flying over cities were put to two sergeant-pilots by the Coroner (Mr. Reynolds Scorer) at an inquest at Lincoln County Hospital yesterday on the three people killed when one of two planes which crashed in the city fell in Oxford Street on Sunday Evening.
Both men replied that, being above the clouds, they thought that they were some miles away from Lincoln at the time.
A verdict of “Death by misadventure” was returned in the case of each of the three victims, the jury complimenting P.C. Hundleby, of the Lincoln City Police, on his brave conduct in entering burning houses and ensuring the safety of the inmates.
The three victims were:
A.C.2 Wallace Lockerbie (20), whose home address is Grantham Terrace, Durham.
Ernest A. Radford (59), of 46, Shakespeare Street, Lincoln, director and manager of Messrs. Gilberts.
Mrs Elizabeth Spray (57), of 5, Oxford Street, Lincoln.
The Coroner explained that on Sunday evening, about 6.30, two planes collided and crashed in Lincoln, one in Oxford Street, and the other in Drake Street.
Mrs. Spray was in her house in Oxford Street at the time. The house was wrecked and she was later discovered in the living room, severely burnt and dead.
Radford was in Oxford Street when some part of the plane struck him.
Lockerbie was motor-cycling along Oxford Street, and he was also hit by some part of the plane. The pilots of the planes escaped by means of their parachutes.
Sergt.-Pilot Warren V. Shenk said that on Sunday evening he and Sergt.-Pilot Bradley Smith were flying at about 8,500 ft. They got separated and lost a bit of altitude to about 7,000 ft. There was a cloud protruding above the general level of the cloud banks and this intervened between them. He started a climbing turn to go over the cloud, but got into it and then there was a crash.
Regards
Simon
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