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TBOA.co.uk - Addiscombe Heritage - Published Articles
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Burt Hinkler and Croydon AirportThe 75th anniversary of the first solo flight made from Britain to Australia, by Queensland-born aviator "Bert" Kinkier, was marked by the visit of another Queenslander, the Australian Deputy High Commissioner, to Airport House, Croydon.
Hinkler, who was born in Bundaberg in Queensland, had planned to fly on to his home town and land in the street outside his mother's house. However, he got caught up in a heat wave and tropical storm as he made his way towards home. He had to land and take drinking water from boreholes. His health was depleted by the strenuous flight and he fell ill as a result of drinking the water. He found an aboriginal stockman and asked him to help by taking a hand-written note to a nearby settlement to explain his predicament. It reassured the people of Camooweal that he was safe and on his way. The Croydon Airport Society will be giving the framed facsimile pride of place in the award winning Visitors' Centre, at Airport House, located in the control tower of the original terminus building. Mr Tweddel said he had, himself, been christened in Bundaberg. He was shown around the Visitors' Centre by members of the society and he expressed his approval at the work done to conserve the history of the world's first international airport: "This is a fantastic resource," he said. "To house a museum in the place where things actually happened makes it worth so much more." The Croydon Airport Visitor Centre has already welcomed around 7,000 visitors since it opened in September 2000. Visitors come from as far afield as Australia, New Zealand, the USA and Europe. It is open on the first Sunday in each month, from 11am to 4pm, and is manned by volunteers from the Croydon Airport Society. |