A week-long excavation, to unearth a Mark 1 Spitfire which crashed at Holme Lode in the Great Fen, on 22 November, 1940 will commence on Monday 5 October. Following the excavation the land will be restored to a mix of fenland habitats and managed as part of the Great Fen nature reserve by the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire. The Heritage Lottery (HLF) is funding the excavation as part of the Great Fen Education and Community programme and is also supporting the post-dig land restoration. A Battle of Britain Memorial overflight is scheduled for 3pm on Thursday 8 October
Spitfire X4593, of 266 Rhodesian Squadron Royal Air Force was based at RAF Wittering; on a routine training flight with two other Spitfires. Pilot Officer Harold Edwin Penketh was seen to break formation entering a dive from which he failed to fully recover. Witnesses stated that his aircraft partially recovered at around 2,000ft but then re-entered a dive and struck the ground vertically.
Plt Off Penketh did not attempt to use his parachute and was killed in the crash, his body was recovered and returned to his home town of Brighton. Investigations concluded that either a failure of the oxygen system or other physical failure had occurred.
A geophysical survey of the site was conducted this August by Peter Masters, from Cranfield University Forensic Institute, and the remains of the plane have been located. The excavation will be carried out by Oxford Archaeology East, project managed by Stephen Macaulay. They will be joined by personnel of the Defence Archaeology Group who oversee Operation Nightingale, a ground-breaking military initiative using aspects of field archaeology and Heritage skills to aid recovery and skill development of service personal and veterans who are suffering injuries due to military service, plus aviation archaeology experts from Historic England will also be on site. Great Fen staff and volunteers from the Great Fen Archaeology Group will also join the excavation.
Material from the excavation site will be taken removed for sorting and cleaning; it is likely that the major airframe components will need mechanical removal. All artefacts remain the property of the Ministry of Defence; RAF Wyton Pathfinder Museum will receive the excavated items into storage in the first instance. A full archive report will be produced within 12 months of the completion of fieldwork and deposited in the Cambridgeshire County Council Historic Environment Record.
Now is the ideal opportunity to excavate the Spitfire as it coincides with the 75th anniversary of Battle of Britain and of the crash itself but more importantly it allows us to record this important piece of our fenland heritage before the rising water table – as we restore the area to wetlands – makes this impossible.
The Great Fen Discovery Day at Holmewood Hall on Saturday 17 October will tell the story of the excavation and some finds from the excavation will be on display.
Find out more on the Great Fen Spitfire website.
Media Enquiries
Please contact Caroline Fitton, Communications Officer for the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 01954 713567 or Jo Dickson, Wildlife Trust Communications Manager This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 01954 713551.
Spitfire image copyright Carole Fletcher