by Roger Lambert
Grumman G-21A Goose Mfrs Construction No 1055 was built in 1939 and sold to the Standard Oil Co of Kansas, Houston TX being registered as NC3022. Purchased by the British American Ambulance Corps on 22 September 1941 and donated to the UK for Ambulance work, the airframe was shipped to the Middle East, arriving at RAF Kasfareet, Egypt in Nov 1941. On receipt it was given the RAF serial HK822 (the HK8xx series being used locally by RAF HQ Middle East (M.E) to take airframes arriving from various sources without a RAF serial on charge).
On receipt we believe that it was repainted in the standard 'Desert' colours (Dark Earth, Midstone and Azure Blue under the engine cowls and wings). However the lower surfaces of fuselage keel and floats appear to have remained in the Black colour these areas were in the scheme applied by the British American Ambulance Corps before shipment as per above. Allocated to the Desert Air Force's Sea Rescue Flight at the end of November 1941, it was found unsuitable for open sea rescues. The machine was passed to No 1 Air Ambulance Unit (1 AAU), Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) on 1 December 1942. HK822 was the only Goose to serve with the Australian military.
HK822 History Summary:
On 9 December 1942, HK822 crashed into the Mediterranean during a 'load test' with seven (7) aboard, everyone surviving. According to the report, "The pilots managed to get from the cockpit into the cabin and after some difficulty all seven members of the crew and passengers succeeded in climbing into a small rubber dinghy. They paddled all night but made no headway against wind and current. "The crew and passengers of HK822 were located by Pilot Officer Carson and Pilot Officer Meldrum in DH.86A A31-7 (from 1 AAU) the next morning and rescued by ship (Barton) or Walrus (Lever) in the afternoon. The pilots were Flight Lt J Bartle and Pilot Officer McWilliam along with passengers Flying Officer O'Donnell, LAC G.R. Richards, LAC J. Richards, LAC G (or C) Allen and AC1 W. Milburn (RAF).
Editor's Note - If the airframe had already been found to be 'unsuitable for open sea rescues' while with the Sea Rescue Flight (which is why it was passed it to 1 AAU), why did Jack Bartle who had been trained as a fighter pilot (he did a full tour as such with 450 Squadron RAAF, before being made C.O of 1 AAU at the end of his fighter tour) think he could successfully land the airframe in the open sea off Benghazi ?? I doubt that he had any training as a Seaplane pilot which is a specialist skill. Sounds very reckless and gungho to me. It could have easily killed all seven of them (Steve).
Clearing Up The Confusion. - Some references quote that HK822 had been registered as G-AFKJ (c/n 1049) on 30 September 1938 to Lord Beaverbrook (C of R 8771). In fact, G-AFKJ became Goose Mark I, MV993, of No. 24 Squadron RAF based at Hendon, Middlesex, after impressment into military service on 18 February 1941. It appears that references to HK822 and MV993 have been muddled up over the years by various sources. However, MV993 was still in service with 24 Squadron, RAF when it flew Wittering-Newmarket-Booker on 2 October 1943, almost a year after HK822 crashed.