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Billionaire donates thousands to restore bog plane 23.08.11

by Linda McGrory

CANADIAN billionaire Galen Weston has donated thousands of pounds towards the restoration of an RAF Spitfire dug from an Inishowen bog earlier this summer.
The WWII aircraft that crashed on the Inishowen peninsula in 1941, was the first one commissioned from a £100,000 donation made by Mr Weston's father, Garfield, during the Battle of Britain.
Its excavation from Glenshinney bog, Moneydarragh, Gleneely, on June 28, last, is said to have surprised and delighted the wealthy businessman.
It also highlighted the story of American pilot, Roland 'Bud' Wolfe who bailed out of the plane with a parachute, before it crashed into the peat valley on November 30, 1941.
Mr Weston made contact, via a third party, with aviation historian and dig organiser, Jonny McNee, just days after the excavation.
Mr McNee, his wife and two children, have now been invited for an all expenses paid trip to meet the Mr Weston at a special event in Toronto next month.
Mr McNee declined to divulge how money had been donated to Derry City Council's Museum Services by the billionaire to fund the Spitfire restoration project, but admitted it was "thousands".
"I will be delighted to meet the man in person and thank him for all he has done for the project," said Mr McNee. "We didn't go out cap in hand asking for a donation...he was straight in there. It obviously means so much to him and it was reflective of what his father had done during the war.
"This is a nice donation which will enable us to put on a first-rate display befitting the fantastic story behind this aircraft."
The Weston money will be used for specialist conservation work on delicate artefacts including Wolfe's leather helmet, goggles, oxygen mask, log book and First Aid kit.
Aviation historian, Jonny McNee, pictured with his daughter, Grace (7), who was with him in Gleneely the day he discovered the location of the crashed RAF Spitfire plane. Jonny recently donated the rear tail wheel of the plane to City of Derry Airport..
It will also fund the building of a scaled model of the Spitfire as well as glass display cases to house the recovered items. A commemorative plaque for Wolfe's RAF 133 (Eagle) Squadron will also be paid for and unveiled at City of Derry Airport later this year along with the plane's tail wheel.
The airport, at Eglinton, operated as a war-time RAF runway where Wolfe and his colleagues in Eagle Squadron were based.
Meanwhile, the pilot's daughters, Barbara Kucharczyk and Betty Wolfe, hope to travel to Derry to see the exhibition of their late father's Spitfire when it goes on display in the city later this year.
In a moving letter to Mr McNee, they said their father spoke little about his experiences of the war but "loved flying".
"We feel certain that he would be stoically ecstatic to heft the tail wheel, lay hands on the propeller, tinker with the Rolls Royce engine, and maybe slip on the flying gear when no one was watching," they said.
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