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Christchurch pilot dies in U.K. crash

A young Christchurch pilot was killed when his cropspraying aircraft and a Royal Air Force Phantom jet collided in mid-air near Downham Market, a town in eastern England, on Friday.

He was PAUL KENNETH HICKMOTT, aged 24, of 38 Merivale Lane.

The two members of the crew of the Phantom were also killed. The crash occurred about three miles south of Downham Market while Mr Hickmott’s aircraft was spraying gorse and the Phantom was on a low-level exercise. The Phantom was one of two flying from the R.A.F. base at Coningsby, about 40 miles north of the town. Mr Hickmott arrived in England only a few weeks I ago to begin work crop-

dusting and gorse-spraying for an Essex firm. His father, Mr K. W. Hickmott, learned of the accident about 4 a.m. on Saturday, and telephoned England on Saturday night for more details. “The Phantom was apparently hedge-hopping and dodging radar, but as far as we can ascertain, the accident was the fault of neithei pilot,” he said last evening. Mr Paul Hickmott formerly worked for Airwork

(N.Z.), Ltd, Rangiora, mostly as a loader driver. He suffered a broken back when his Piper Pawnee crashed , into a hill at Mount Torlesse ' near Springfield, a year ago. He was flown from Mount ; Torlesse by Iroquois heli- , copter, and spent several i months recovering from the , accident in Christchurch Hospital.

Villagers protest The Phantom crash has caused a storm of protest from villagers in Norfolk, reports the Nev/ Zealand Press Association. The member of Parliament for South-West Norfolk, Mr P. Hawkins, has been told that hundreds of villagers are being endangered by low-level flights around Downham Market, and a petition calling for an end to the flights has been opened. Mr Hawkins is compiling a list of complaints to send to the R.A.F. Undersecretary. “This area is criss-crossed

with high-tension cables, and crop-spraying planes are in ! the air very often which • makes the situation even ’more hazardous,” he said. | The villagers said the R.A.F. aircraft were nearly “clipping the tops of the trees” in routine flights ini the area. “These planes have been' coming over two or three; times a week, and I am very, deeply concerned about the safety of my parishioners,” said the Revi J. Beloe, vicar of Fordham, in whose parish the accident occurred. “Could see pilot” “The plane that crashed was so low that my son could see the pilot. This was about two seconds before the accident, when the plane was flying between my church and the vicarage, a distance of about 300 yards. “The plane was just getting over the top of some’ 80ft high lime trees.” If the R.A.F. pilot had; changed slightly his course; or altitude in the collision; he would have ploughed into I one of two nearby villages,; jMr Beloe said. j

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19740812.2.5

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CXIV, Issue 33610, 12 August 1974, Page 1

Word Count
477

Christchurch pilot dies in U.K. crash Press, Volume CXIV, Issue 33610, 12 August 1974, Page 1

Christchurch pilot dies in U.K. crash Press, Volume CXIV, Issue 33610, 12 August 1974, Page 1