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Buried treasure in Burma: Squadron of lost WWII Spitfires


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Posted

cool, looks like they'll come back home too :thumb:

Posted

Tally bally ho what what!

Cracking find and I hope we get them back on British soil.

Posted

They would make an excellent exhibit un a museum, i would imagine they will be in mint condition.

Posted

knew i should have bought a metal detector instead of a fireblade... could have my own fleet of spitfires by now :(

Posted

Often when a military force departs a station for good, it's easier to bury the stuff than organise the logistics to take it home, especially if there's been a war on and stuff like fuel is in short supply.

Go hunting around Devonshire and you'll find LOADS of site where entire fleets of US vehicles and all this equipment were just buried. Harley WLAs, Half-tracks, Jeeps, Deuce & a Halves, weapons carriers, the lot.

Most of the stockpiles are on private land now though, with little surface evidence remaining.

We regularly visit one particular site where we know there are Quonset huts and their entire contents just dumped into a pit and filled in, but the landowner won't let anyone touch it. The only trace is the remnants of the Quonsets' foundations. There's also a Real Tennis court of the type set up by Henry VIII still standing, all original Tudor brickwork and everything... apart from one side wall that the Yanks smashed in so they could park their trucks in there. They also used it to host evening dances and they even rebuilt the wall on their way out!

Posted

What a find

Dunno abnout a museum, Id like to see the squadron made airworthy. What an attraction for airshows/national celebrations/flypasts etc etc

Somehow, I suspect the state would not want to cough up support

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Aye they didn't help out much getting the Vulcan Bomber restored,

  • 4 months later...
Posted

Seems they were never buried at all..........just an urban myth.

archival records showed that the RAF unit that handled shipments through Rangoon docks only received 37 aircraft in total from three transport ships between 1945 and 1946.

Most of the Spitfires that were in Burma at the time appear to have been re-exported in the autumn of 1946

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21483187

  • 2 months later...
Posted

Dont tell the MOD or they will give them to the RAF instead of euro fighters to save money, seems to me Its more important to our Government to give all our money to "Johnny Foreigner" "Migrant workers my arse! more like Migrant shirkers".

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