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-   -   Heath Row - Pictures of the early days wanted (https://www.pprune.org/aviation-history-nostalgia/229111-heath-row-pictures-early-days-wanted.html)

LowNSlow 5th Jun 2006 11:08

Heath Row - Pictures of the early days wanted
 
My dad took a school trip to Heath Row as part of his post RAF career as a schoolmaster in 1948 / 49. He flew in a Dragon Rapide and recalls that the fledgling airport was mostly tents. Does anybody have access to pictures taken around that time that I could show him please?

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 5th Jun 2006 18:31

There are some amazing old shots here:
http://www.abpic.co.uk/search.php?q=...hrow&u=airshow

You need to scroll through many pages to sort out the old ones..

ChrisVJ 6th Jun 2006 00:44

So was it a lady flying the Dragon? Nancy used to let me stand next to her seat and pointed out the Tower and Tower Bridge.

Unfortunately I only ave two pics, taken at my birthday party, oe was my head stuck out of the FOwindow of a Comet and the other inside THE restaurant, which was a Nissen hut, where we did the sandwiches and cake thing. Then we all went off to the resevoir at the end of the airport and had bonfires (with all the construction debris, I think,) and fireworks.

My grandfather used to organise cricket matches on the turf between the rope (that was the fence then!) and the runway! Why don't we do that today?

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 6th Jun 2006 06:58

Pssstt Mike... Your slip is showing - the pic is upside down! You didn't pinch it from Dr Strangelove by chance? That's the map on the back of the wall in the mad man's office.

Yep.. it was a lady flying the Dragon Rapide - she had a foreign name, which has become lost in the rats nest I call a brain. Sorry.

treadigraph 6th Jun 2006 08:05

It's a great pic, what a difference from today - and I didn't notice it was upside down either!

Rapide lady was Monique Agazarian (spelling?) - one of her Rapides was G-AGJG, now beautifully restored and flying from Duxford!

henry crun 6th Jun 2006 09:14

Here are three I took with a box brownie in 1950, they are faded now so did not scan well.
The first PanAm, the second BOAC, and I cannot remember which company owned the third.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v712/crun9/LAP.jpg

renfrew 6th Jun 2006 14:18

Is that the BSAA logo on the York's nose and the aircraft name Panama?
Quite a rare photograph.
Ken.

henry crun 6th Jun 2006 22:35

You are right renfrew, it is.

GrumpyOldFart 7th Jun 2006 00:25

I always understood the original plan was for six runways - but in the LBU photo above it looks more like seven, with one passing right through the central area. Is that possible?

JC

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 7th Jun 2006 07:05

No, the original plan was for NINE runways, as the link below shows. If only that had gone ahead...

http://www.members.aol.com/HEATHROWDIRECTOR/LAPPLAN.htm

LowNSlow 7th Jun 2006 07:37

Thanks for the links and stories folks, I'm sure my dad will enjoy them.

henry crun 7th Jun 2006 22:14

renfrew: Please tell me why it is a rare photo, did that York disappear/crash shortly after I took it ?

HEATHROW DIRECTOR 8th Jun 2006 06:44

Jerry Coe... further to your note.. That "runway" which might have crossed the central area remained as a taxiway. It was known to (much) older ATCOs as "Wates Alley" as that was the name (spelling?) of the Captain who attempted to take off along it in poor visibility thinking he was on 15R.

renfrew 8th Jun 2006 08:19

henry,
BSAA were absorbed by BOAC in 1949 so the photo of the York was taken at an interesting time.


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