Meteor near Wethercote Farm, Lower Bilsdale Moor,

A Meteor and a road cone.

On the 27th of October 1952, the pilot of this Meteor lost control and the aircraft dived into the ground during a night flying GCA exercise under the control of RAF Seaton Snook. The accident was caused by the trainee pilot taking the wrong flying helmet with him on the aircraft, he passed out due to lack oxygen and was killed in the resulting crash. Mr William Wood recalled the crash very vividly to me when I visited him in June 2003. The aircraft dived into the ground near vertically very close to a dry stone wall, this sent soil and stone through the air for afew hundred metres. The aircraft was completely destroyed. Fuel ignited and set fire to nearby fields to the west of the crash. Following the crash, the crater was filled and wall rebuilt in later years. The inquest for the crash was held in a hanger at Middleton St George.

The aircraft was built to contract 6/ACFT/1389 by the Gloster Aircraft Co. Ltd. and delivered to the RAF in January 1949. It remained in MU storage until being issued to 205 AFS which formed at Middleton St. George on 7th September 1950. It was written off in the incident detailed above with Cat. 5/FA Burnt damage on 27th October 1952.

Pilot - P/O John Michael Dill RAF (2521918), aged 19. Of Stratford, Mancaster. Buried Southern Cemetery, Manchester (grave no. I 394). He was born on 25th February 1933.


The red dot roughly marks where the Meteor crashed, photo taken from the opposite side of Bilsdale.

My thanks to Mr W Wood for recounting his memories of this crash and others nearby.

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