Recent History:
The aircraft was found by a West Sussex based collector called Roddy Morgan in
Colley’s scrap yard in Hounslow some 20 years ago who passed the remains onto
the RAF Museum. They in turn exchanged just the fuselage for a pair of Bristol
Bulldog wings with Mr. Viv Bellamy, of Land’s End airport, who used this
fuselage as patterns to construct a non-authentic Hawker Fury replica for the
then well known collector, The Hon. Patrick Lindsay.
These remains and other collected Hawker parts were purchased by ourselves from
Mr. Bellamy, and later on we acquired the wings from the RAF Museum.
We are not
sure how the aircraft remains arrived at Colley’s other than the fact that
this company was the official scrap collectors for Hawker’s just down the
road. The RAF/FAA history has been lost, though evidence from log books and
photographs show the aircraft still in service on HMS Glorious, with 802
Squadron in 1938 and ‘507’ painted on both sides of the rear fuselage. The
last official record of this aircraft was it having a category “W” landing
accident in Malta, 1938. It is significant also that the fuel tank has
traces of brown/green camouflage on it, this scheme not being used until
late in the 30’s. Perhaps it was not fully repaired, but used as an airfield
decoy during the 2nd World War.
The RAF identity was found on a number of major components (fuel tank, the
fuel tank mount, oil tank etc.,) as crudely painted ‘Nimrod 81’. On a brass
data plate on the oil tank was the date ‘10-12-31’ and the manufacturer’s
serial of 41H.43617. On this evidence and the fact that it is a Nimrod 1
from the construction (numerous components are part numbered), we are fairly
certain this aircraft is in fact S.1581, as it was practice in the Navy at
the time to brush crudely on major components an abbreviated serial, due to
the frequent repairs needed after deck landings.
With most of the major assemblies of aircraft evident, but in very rusty or
poor condition, we were faced with a re-construction (repair) whereby most
of the non-stainless steel components need to be replaced. The aircraft is
liberally adorned with stainless steel junction plates all or most of which
were re-used, as indeed also the heavy steel and aluminium parts.
The aircraft
was completed during the summer of 2000, and the first flight was on the 7th
of July from RAF Henlow. A comprehensive development period followed, which
was satisfactory completed. The aircraft was exchanged for the Fighter
Collections Hawker Hurricane in 2002.