Misplaced Pages

Hawker Hunter Tower Bridge incident

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Alan Pollock) Unauthorised London jet excursion of 1968

Hawker Hunter Tower Bridge incident
Photograph of a Hawker Hunter aircraftHawker Hunter of the type used. Flight Lieutenant Alan Pollock was the first person to fly a jet aircraft under the upper span of Tower Bridge.
Date5 April 1968 (1968-04-05)
SummaryAircraft flew under bridge following unofficial flypast
SiteTower Bridge, London, England, UK
51°30′20″N 0°04′32″W / 51.50556°N 0.07556°W / 51.50556; -0.07556
Aircraft
Aircraft typeHawker Hunter FGA.9
Operator1 Squadron, Royal Air Force
RegistrationXF442
Flight originRAF Tangmere, West Sussex, England, UK
DestinationRAF West Raynham, Norfolk, England, UK
Crew1
Fatalities0
Injuries0
Survivors1

The Hawker Hunter Tower Bridge incident occurred on 5 April 1968, when Alan Pollock, a Royal Air Force (RAF) Hawker Hunter pilot performed unauthorised low flying over several London landmarks and then flew through the span of Tower Bridge on the River Thames. His actions were to mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of the RAF and as a demonstration against the Ministry of Defence for not recognising it.

Upon landing Pollock was arrested and later invalided out of the RAF on medical grounds, which avoided a court martial.

Background

In the 1960s, the Ministry of Defence saw a shifting emphasis from crewed aircraft towards guided missiles, originating from the 1957 Defence White Paper by then-Minister of Defence Duncan Sandys. The British aircraft industry had slipped into general decline, and morale in the Royal Air Force (RAF) was low. Flight Lieutenant Alan Pollock, a flight commander in No. 1 (Fighter) Squadron RAF, was further displeased that no aerial displays had been planned to mark the RAF's 50th anniversary.

On 1 April 1968, Pollock and other members of No. 1 Squadron took part in anniversary leaflet raids on other RAF stations and on 4 April visited the soon-to-be-closed RAF Tangmere in West Sussex, where they performed a display.

Incident

Tower Bridge

On 5 April 1968, Pollock decided on his own initiative to mark the occasion of the RAF anniversary with an unauthorised display. His flight left RAF Tangmere to return to RAF West Raynham in Norfolk, a route that took them over London. Immediately after takeoff, Pollock left the flight and flew at a low level. He made a low-altitude, high-speed pass over Dunsfold Aerodrome, Hawker's home airfield. He then took his Hawker Hunter FGA.9 (XF442), a single-seater, ground-attack jet fighter, over London at low level. He circled the Houses of Parliament three times as a demonstration against Prime Minister Harold Wilson's government, whose defence cuts had impacted the RAF. Pollock continued to the Royal Air Force Memorial on the Victoria Embankment and dipped his wings over the memorial in a gesture of respect. He then flew under the top span of Tower Bridge. He later wrote of the decision to fly through Tower Bridge:

Until this very instant I'd had absolutely no idea that, of course, Tower Bridge would be there. It was easy enough to fly over it, but the idea of flying through the spans suddenly struck me. I had just ten seconds to grapple with the seductive proposition which few ground attack pilots of any nationality could have resisted. My brain started racing to reach a decision. Years of fast low-level strike flying made the decision simple...

Knowing that he was likely to be stripped of his flying status as a result of this display, he proceeded to make low passes over several airfields (Wattisham, Lakenheath and Marham) in inverted flight at an altitude of about 200 feet (61 m) while returning to his base at RAF West Raynham. Shortly after his return, he was formally arrested by Flying Officer Roger Gilpin.

Although other pilots had flown under the upper span of Tower Bridge, Pollock was the first to do so in a jet aircraft.

Aftermath

In the immediate aftermath of the incident, Pollock's unit was posted to North Africa without him while he remained on a charge. He was subsequently invalided out of the RAF on medical grounds. This avoided a court martial and the embarrassment to the government of Pollock publicising the reason for his stunt and perhaps receiving the support of the public.

The RAF placed Pollock in a "psychiatric hold" for two days. Demonstrations of support for his conduct was expressed by British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), which sent him a keg of beer, and six members of the House of Commons spoke on Pollock's behalf in Parliament.

Notes

Footnotes

  1. "Hunter to Tower - Under". Flight International. 11 April 1968. p. 500. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  2. ^ "Jever Steam Laundry – 4 Sqn personnel Pollock 004". Rafjever.org. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  3. ^ James Hamilton-Paterson, Empire of the Clouds: When Britain's Aircraft Ruled the World, London: Faber and Faber, 2010, pp. 344–50. ISBN 978-0-571-24794-3.
  4. Out of the blue : the sometimes scary and often funny world of flying in the Royal Air Force : as told by some of those who were there. Farnborough: Halldale Media Group. 2011. ISBN 9780957092808.

See also

References

External links

Aviation accidents and incidents in 1968 (1968)
Jan 6 Aeroflot Flight 1668Jan 21 Thule Air Base B-52 crashFeb 7 Indian Air Force An-12 crashFeb 16 Civil Air Transport Flight 10Feb 29 Aeroflot Flight 15Mar 6 Air France Flight 212Mar 9 Sainte-Marie Douglas DC-6 crashMar 24 Aer Lingus Flight 712Mar 27 Yuri Gagarin's MiG-15 crashMar 27 Ozark Air Lines Flight 965Apr 5 Hawker Hunter Tower Bridge incidentApr 8 BOAC Flight 712Apr 20 South African Airways Flight 228May 3 Braniff Flight 352May 12 Kham Duc C-130 shootdownMay 22 Los Angeles Airways Flight 841May 28 Garuda Indonesian Airways Flight 892Jul 1 Seaboard World Airlines Flight 253AJul 3 BKS Air Transport Flight C.6845Jul 23 El Al Flight 426 hijackingAug 14 Los Angeles Airways Flight 417Sep 11 Air France Flight 1611Oct 25 Northeast Airlines Flight 946Nov 22 Japan Air Lines Flight 2Nov 24 Pan Am Flight 281Dec 2 Wien Consolidated Airlines Flight 55Dec 12 Pan Am Flight 217Dec 24 Allegheny Airlines Flight 736Dec 26 El Al Flight 253Dec 26 Pan Am Flight 799Dec 27 North Central Airlines Flight 458Dec 27 Ozark Air Lines Flight 982Dec 31 MacRobertson Miller Airlines Flight 1750
1967   ◄    ►   1969
Aviation accidents and incidents in the United Kingdom in the 1960s
1962
1963
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
Accidents and incidents in Crown Dependencies and current Overseas Territories are marked with an asterisk (*).
1950–1959 ◄ 1960–1969 ► 1970–1979
Categories: