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US Navy R38 Airship Disaster Memorial Plaque

<< Back to Elloughton - St. Mary's Church

Details:

Mounted on a wall inside the church.


Plaque

A rectangular brass plaque, inscribed in English in incised and black lettering, featuring the US Navy insignia and a commemoration message. This plaque is dedicated to four officers from Elloughton who were killed in the Air-ship R38 disaster. These four officers lodged at 51 Elloughton Road in the village for some time whilst trials of the airship at Howden continued. Furthermore, Lieutenant Little, one of the four officers killed, was married in St Mary’s Church to his American sweetheart, on 9th October 1920.

 

During the latter stages of the First World War, a number of airships had been commissioned by the Government. The order for the R.38 was taken up by Short Brothers at Cardington in February 1919 and work started on what promised to be the largest airship in the world.

 

However, with the end of the First World War England's economy slumped and the Treasury had to re-evaluate its spending. Naturally, this led to problems with the construction of the R.38. (Other airship orders were canceled and most of the existing airships were either sold off or broken up). Consequently, the order for the R.38 was canceled and Short Brothers was compensated for the loss of the contract.

 

At the end of the war, German airships were divided between the European allies as laid out in the Treaty of Versailles. The Americans decided that they wanted a large rigid airship and so the R.38 contract was offered to them in October 1919. For 2.5 million pounds the British agreed to build the R.38 and train its crew and officers.

 

The Americans agreed and a delivery date of 'late 1920' was arranged. Progress was slow on the construction of the ship and she was finally completed on the 7th June 1921. Because of this delay and the pressure to get her flying there was no chance to change her registration from R.38 to the American ZR2. Therefore, she flew with the US insignia markings on the outer cover and also her British registration R.38 on her first flight, the plan is to convert her to ZR2 when she reached Howden.

 

Doubts about the airship's strength arose after she sustained damage during the flight between Cardington and Howden but after her fourth trial flight, the R.38/ZR2 was ready to fly to Pulham, Norfolk. On arrival at Pulham, the R.38/ZR2 was unable to land as the airfield was obscured by fog and when the fog had not cleared by the next morning it was decided that they should return to Howden and carry out some more trials en route.

 

It was whilst carrying out this test flight over the Humber on the 24th of August that disaster struck. The airship broke into two after the ship seemed to crumple in the middle. There were two explosions in the front section which caused the deaths of forty-four crew. Five members who had been in the tail section survived.

 

Original reports suggested that the airship had structural weaknesses which caused the crash but the Board of Inquiry offered no technical opinions on the crash. The Americans were offered the R.36 as compensation but it was estimated that they lost almost two million dollars as a result of the disaster.

 

Of the crew of 49, only five members who had been in the tail section survived, and some of the crash victims were buried in a mass grave at a Hull cemetery. There is also a memorial in the Western cemetery on Spring Bank West, Hull, to commemorate all those who lost their lives. (Our webpage for the aforementioned is here: https://www.uswarmemorials.org/html/monument_details.php?SiteID=1688&MemID=2222&keyword=hull)

Source of information: www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk, Imperial War Museum War Memorials Register, museumcollections.hullcc.gov.uk, www.waymarking.com, bbc.com

Source of photos: www.waymarking.com

Monument Text:

TO THE GLORY OF GOD

AND IN AFFECTIONATE REMEMBRANCE OF

COMMANDER E. W. MAXFIELD

LT COMMANDER E. W. COIL

LT COMMANDER V. N. BIEG

LIEUTENANT C. G. LITTLE

OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY

WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES IN THE DISASTER

TO THE AIR-SHIP R38. 24TH AUG. 1921.

 

"IN THE SIGHT OF THE UNWISE THEY SEEMED TO DIE AND THEIR DEPARTURE IS TAKEN

FOR MISERY, AND THEIR GOING FROM US TO BE UTTER DESTRUCTION, BUT THEY ARE IN PEACE."

WISDOM III. 3. 2.

Commemorates:

People:

Valentine Nicholas Bieg

Emory Wilbur Coil

Charles Gray “Petit” Little

Louis Henry Maxfield

Units:

Naval Aviation

U.S. Rigid Air Detachment

United States Navy

Wars:

WWI

Other images :