• Seriously?!! The London Tower Bridge Incident!!

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 12 15:04:39 2022
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc

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    Forces Support Page
    Y8esSterday uaontuo10 11e:a5da4m3 1AM ·

    The London Tower Bridge Incident!!
    On 5th April 1968, a Royal Air Force, Hawker Hunter pilot, Allan
    Pollock performed unauthorised low flying across famous landmarks
    throughout London.
    Pollock flew the Hawker Hunter through Tower Bridge which situates over
    the River Thames. Allan Pollock performed the maneuvers to mark the 50th anniversary of the founding against the RAF and a demonstration against
    the Ministry of Defence for not recognising it.
    On that day, the aircraft was flown out of RAF Tangmere and Pollock flew
    low level across London. The Hawker Hunter circled Houses of Parliament
    three times as a demonstration against the prime minister at the time,
    Harold Wilson and the government. Allan chose to do this as the
    government had made cuts which impacted the RAF. The next landmark was
    over the Royal Air Force memorial where he dipped the wings. After, he
    then flew through Tower Bridge.
    Also, Pollock flew low level across several airfields, which were;
    Dunsfold Aerodrome, Wattisham, Lakenheath, and finally, over Marham.
    Pollock then arrived at RAF West Raynham. After landing at RAF West
    Raynham, Allan Pollock was arrested and taken out of the RAF on medical grounds.

    Thank you Dave for the send in.

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  • From Jim Wilkins@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 13 07:10:08 2022
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc

    "a425couple" wrote in message news:88JDJ.112013$zF3.6943@fx03.iad...

    from facebook - has a 'picture'

    Forces Support Page
    Y8esSterday uaontuo10 11e:a5da4m3 1AM ·

    The London Tower Bridge Incident!!
    On 5th April 1968, a Royal Air Force, Hawker Hunter pilot, Allan
    Pollock performed unauthorised low flying across famous landmarks
    throughout London.
    Pollock flew the Hawker Hunter through Tower Bridge which situates over
    the River Thames. Allan Pollock performed the maneuvers to mark the 50th anniversary of the founding against the RAF and a demonstration against
    the Ministry of Defence for not recognising it.
    On that day, the aircraft was flown out of RAF Tangmere and Pollock flew
    low level across London. The Hawker Hunter circled Houses of Parliament
    three times as a demonstration against the prime minister at the time,
    Harold Wilson and the government. Allan chose to do this as the
    government had made cuts which impacted the RAF. The next landmark was
    over the Royal Air Force memorial where he dipped the wings. After, he
    then flew through Tower Bridge.
    Also, Pollock flew low level across several airfields, which were;
    Dunsfold Aerodrome, Wattisham, Lakenheath, and finally, over Marham.
    Pollock then arrived at RAF West Raynham. After landing at RAF West
    Raynham, Allan Pollock was arrested and taken out of the RAF on medical grounds.

    Thank you Dave for the send in.

    ---------------------------------

    Such stunts are what flight simulators are good for.

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  • From AnthonyL@21:1/5 to a425couple@hotmail.com on Thu Jan 13 13:04:01 2022
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc

    On Wed, 12 Jan 2022 15:04:39 -0800, a425couple
    <a425couple@hotmail.com> wrote:

    from facebook - has a 'picture'

    Forces Support Page
    Y8esSterday uaontuo10 11e:a5da4m3 1AM ·

    The London Tower Bridge Incident!!
    On 5th April 1968, a Royal Air Force, Hawker Hunter pilot, Allan
    Pollock performed unauthorised low flying across famous landmarks
    throughout London.


    Alan not Allan - and in his own words:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5571423/RAF-veteran-pilot-82-relives-split-second-decision-fly-busy-Tower-Bridge.html

    --
    AnthonyL

    Why ever wait to finish a job before starting the next?

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  • From a425couple@21:1/5 to AnthonyL on Thu Jan 13 10:08:17 2022
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc

    On 1/13/2022 5:04 AM, AnthonyL wrote:
    On Wed, 12 Jan 2022 15:04:39 -0800, a425couple
    <a425couple@hotmail.com> wrote:

    from facebook - has a 'picture'

    Forces Support Page
    Y8esSterday uaontuo10 11e:a5da4m3 1AM ·

    The London Tower Bridge Incident!!
    On 5th April 1968, a Royal Air Force, Hawker Hunter pilot, Allan
    Pollock performed unauthorised low flying across famous landmarks
    throughout London.


    Alan not Allan - and in his own words:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5571423/RAF-veteran-pilot-82-relives-split-second-decision-fly-busy-Tower-Bridge.html

    excerpts

    Flying over the river would be the safest and quietest route
    through the capital. ‘I went over the Thames because I didn’t
    want to cause any trouble,’ Alan says. ----

    (Heavens No, no trouble intended!!!)

    Alan, angry at defence cuts and what he saw as the Labour
    government’s complicity in the lack of celebrations for the
    anniversary, headed for Parliament and Downing Street. As he
    crossed Vauxhall Bridge he saw Westminster in the distance.
    Just as Big Ben struck midday, he opened the Hunter’s throttle
    and began three low, loud circuits of Parliament.

    -----The jet flashed safely over Hungerford Bridge, Waterloo
    Bridge, Blackfriars Bridge, Southwark Bridge and London Bridge.
    Then he was in for a surprise. ‘There, staring me in the face,
    was Tower Bridge. I’d forgotten it was there!

    ‘I could have gone over it, but I was intrigued by it as a target.’

    He decided to fly through it, squeezing the aircraft at high speed
    between the busy road and the walkway over it.----

    Then he rang his wife’s mother. ‘There might be a bit of trouble
    — but not to worry,’ he told her.
    He was right, there was trouble — the RAF top brass was not
    impressed with his exploits.
    He was put in close arrest for two days and a psychiatrist
    concluded that Alan was lucid enough to face a court martial.

    Hundreds of letters of congratulation from RAF colleagues and members of
    the public arrived at Alan’s squadron, along with a barrel of beer from
    BOAC.

    An all-party motion of support, tabled in the House of Commons, was
    signed by six MPs (four of whom had been in the RAF).

    In the end, Alan was given a medical discharge instead of a court
    martial, possibly to deny him the chance to explain his reasons for the flypast.----

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  • From Keith Willshaw@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 16 14:43:37 2022
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc

    On 12/01/2022 23:04, a425couple wrote:
    from facebook - has a 'picture'

    Forces Support Page
    Y8esSterday uaontuo10 11e:a5da4m3 1AM  ·

    The London Tower Bridge Incident!!
    On 5th April 1968, a Royal Air Force, Hawker  Hunter pilot, Allan
    Pollock performed unauthorised low flying across famous landmarks
    throughout London.

    Dunsfold Aerodrome, Wattisham, Lakenheath, and finally, over Marham.
    Pollock then arrived at RAF West Raynham. After landing at RAF West
    Raynham, Allan Pollock was arrested and taken out of the RAF on medical grounds.

    Thank you Dave for the send in.

    You need to understand the context here. Government policy at the time
    was that fighters were obsolete and the future of air defense lay with SAM's

    1968 was the 50th anniversary of the RAF but the Minster of Defence
    decided not to mark the occasion so Pollock decided to make his own
    protest and made this very hard to ignore. Not only did he fly under
    Tower Bridge but flew over London at low level and made dummy attack
    runs on the Houses of Parliament and various airfields. The RAF was made
    to look extrenely foolish having failed to get a single fighter airborne.

    The last thing the government wanted was to make all this public by
    bringing him before a court martial so invalided him out. At the time
    their approval rating in opinion polls was extremeley low. This inflamed matters even more and several MP's pointed out that official air defense
    policy of the Labour Government was clearly nonsense. BOAC set him their congratulations and a keg of beer :) The Labour government lost the 1970 election.

    In 1982 the Conservative government officially exonerated him.

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