A Spitfire flown in WW2 by Alastair ‘Sandy’ Gunn, whose story was immortalised in The Great Escape, is set to return to the skies. 

The AA810 is being restored with a £500,000 donation from engineering giant GKN, and help from its apprentices in Bristol and the Isle of Wight. 

Returning to the skies: The AA810 (similar to the aircraft pictured) is being restored with a £500,000 donation from engineering giant GKN

Returning to the skies: The AA810 (similar to the aircraft pictured) is being restored with a £500,000 donation from engineering giant GKN

GKN Aerospace – owned by FTSE100 industrials investor Melrose – originally supplied components for Spitfires including the AA810. 

In the 1930s and 40s, a thousand Spitfires rolled off its Hadley Castle production line near Telford. 

But the AA810 – which was unarmed – was shot down over Norway in 1942. 

Gunn escaped but was made a prisoner of war. 

The project is being headed by former engineer Tony Hoskins and businessman Michael Smith. 

John Pritchard, of GKN Aerospace, said the firm’s ‘history is entwined with this remarkable story’.

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Beauty fans dash to Superdrug to pick up Elf make-up products that are slashed to as little as 10p

BEAUTY fans are rushing to Superdrug desperate to get their mitts on…

Full list of towns at risk of having NO banks after waves of closures – is yours one of them?

MAJOR banks are closing down high street locations at an alarming rate…

Average UK house price tops £250,000 but ‘market starting to slow’

Proportion of sellers reducing asking price and time taken to sell have…

T’Pau singer Carol Decker talks to ME & MY MONEY

On song: Carol Decker was evicted from her family home as a…