10.
Hercules on a Trailer
On the 10th
February 1945 Beaufighter T
FX RD210 took off from its station Pershore, Worcs. Its Pilot,
Australian Flight Officer Alan L Roe, an experienced Pilot of 641
hours, but only around 40 on type, was performing a fuel consumption
test. (no two engines ever used the same amount of fuel), his Navigator
was W/O Newbry.
The flight had
gone according to plan as no contact was made throughout their test
flight. The weather that day was light rain and cloud, but during
their journey north they were
confronted with a bad storm, just over the
Welshpool area.

They tried to
fly around this while attempting to stay in visual range of the ground to ease
navigation. During
this manoeuvre they must have become lost, their course now took them
into the mountains, straight into the cliff face of Aran Fawddwy.
A while later a
local Farmer, who was passing Craiglyn Dyfi, the lake at the foot of
Aran Fawddwy, noticed the wreckage of RD210. On close inspection
his fears were realised, the wreckage still contained the remains of
Flight Officer Roe. Not knowing how many crew were on board the
farmer began to search for others & a short time later he
discovered W/O Newbry. By the Farmer’s account Newbry
appeared to have survived the crash and had managed to crawl away from
the wreckage only to die later from his wounds.

One can assume
that Flight Office Roe had not dived headlong into the cliff (as has
been written in other accounts) in his attempt to avoid the
storm. I am sure the Navigator would have been thoroughly aware
of the area of high ground they were in. So, diving down to find
out where they were is out of the question.
In their
attempt to stay ‘visual’ they had inadvertently flown up
the valley towards the cloud hidden mountains, then on seeing the
cliffs at the last moment, tried to pull up. The impact, by at first
not being direct, had saved the Navigator from a quick death, only by
being far from immediate help would this be his end - the Pilot died
instantly. Flight Officer Roe is buried in Chester’s Blacon
Cemetery while W/O Newbry was taken to his home town.
For almost
sixty years the two Hercules engines lay amongst the other wreckage in
and around the lake. Just recently local Farmer Mr D.G. Roberts
from Bala took it upon himself to set up a memorial to the crew.
He started by removing the engines from the mountain side for safe
keeping with the help of around thirty young Farmers.
In the not too
distant future he hopes to set up one engine on the south side of the
Arans as a more public memorial. The other engine will return to
the lakeside and be mounted in memorial close to the crash site.
To promote his plans he has set up one engine on a homemade trailer
& transports it around vintage shows and fetes in the North Wales area to push
home the sacrifice that these young airmen had made. Also to give
people, who look upon the engine with interest, an idea of his
honourable intentions.

I for one look
forward to seeing these memorials set up. No matter what legal
questions may be asked about the slightly unofficial removal of the
engines, his heart is in the right place. Let’s just see
the engines there, in their right place.
NB:
RD210’s sister aircraft RD220 is currently under restoration at
the Museum of Flight at East Fortune Scotland after being brought to
the UK from South
Africa in 2000.
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