- Star Tiger and Star Ariel
The "Star Tiger" and "Star Ariel" were two Avro Tudor IV passenger aircraft owned and operated by
British South American Airways Corporation as part of an air fleet providing passenger services between Europe and South America during the late 1940s. The loss of both aircraft over theAtlantic is still a mystery that remains unsolved to this day, with the resulting speculation helping to develop theBermuda Triangle legend.Origins of Service
British South American Airways Corporation (B.S.A.A.C.), was an airline created by
World War II veteran pilots in an effort to provide service into the previously untappedSouth American trade and passenger routes. Originally named British Latin American Air Lines (BLAIR) it was split off from theBritish Overseas Airways Corporation to operate theirSouth Atlantic routes. It commenced transatlantic services in March 1946, with a BSAA plane making the first operational flight from LondonHeathrow Airport .The airline operated mostly
Avro aircraft: Yorks, Lancastrians and Tudors, and flew toBermuda , theWest Indies and the western coast of South America."Star Tiger"
On
January 30 ,1948 , the "Star Tiger" (registered as "G-AHNP") had logged just over 500 flight hours. The plane was flown and commanded by Capt. B.W. McMillan, and copiloted by both Capt. David Colby and C. Ellison, all experienced pilots. The "Star Tiger" was enroute fromEngland to Bermuda, but had a fuel layover in theAzores . At 03:15 hours onJanuary 31 , Capt. McMillan requested a bearing on Bermuda. The request was routine, and there was no panic or cause for alarm. After receiving the bearings, Capt. McMillan gave an estimated arrival time at 05:00. That was the last contact with the "Star Tiger".Bermuda went on the alert after 05:00. The Civil Air Ministry launched a search and full scale investigation, but no signs of the "Star Tiger", or her 29 passengers and crew were ever found. A merchant ship, SS "Troubador", had reported seeing a low flying aircraft with lights blinking about halfway between Bermuda and the entrance to
Delaware Bay , which meant that if the aircraft was "Star Tiger", then it had gone well off-course from Bermuda. "Star Tiger" had reported in one of its messages that it was flying at an altitude of 2,000 feet, ostensibly to control a mishap should the cabin lose pressure, but at that altitude there would have been no time to issue a distress call should the aircraft have been forced to ditch at sea.It needs to be borne in mind that 2,000 ft is a relatively low altitude to be flying without precise radio navigation aids, or visual references.Fact|date=May 2008 Altitude would have been determined by
barometric altimeter . Since air pressure will rise, or fall over large distances, errors were likely to creep in. It is not implausible that the aircraft was simply flown inadvertently into the sea in total darkness.The Civil Air Ministry later issued this press release into the incident:
"In closing this report it may truly be said that no more baffling problem has ever been presented for investigation. In the complete absence of any reliable evidence as to either the nature or the cause of the accident of Star Tiger the Court has not been able to do more than suggest possibilities, none of which reaches the level even of probability. Into all activities which involve the co-operation of man and machine two elements enter of a very diverse character [sic] . There is an incalculable element of the human equation dependent upon imperfectly known factors; and there is the mechanical element subject to quite different laws. A breakdown may occur in either separately or in both in conjunction. Or some external cause may overwhelm both man and machine. What happened in this case will never be known and the fate of "Star Tiger" must remain an unsolved mystery." [http://www.bermuda-triangle.org/html/the_tudors.html]
Among the passengers was Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham, a hero of World War II, formerly Air Officer
Commander-in-Chief , 2nd Tactical Air Force during theBattle of Normandy ."Star Ariel"
Registered as "G-AGRE", "Star Ariel" departed Bermuda for
Kingston, Jamaica onJanuary 17 1949 , carrying seven crewmembers and thirteen passengers. Shortly after take-off, her pilot, Capt. J. C. McPhee, radioed in the following report;:"I DEPARTED FROM KINDLEY FIELD AT 8:41 A.M. HOURS. MY ETA AT KINGSTON 2:10 P.M. HOURS. I AM FLYING IN GOOD VISIBILITY AT 18,000 FT. I FLEW OVER 150 MILES SOUTH OF KINDLEY FIELD AT 9:32 HRS. MY ETA AT 30° N IS 9:37 HRS. WILL YOU ACCEPT CONTROL?"
And then later;
:"I WAS OVER 30° N AT 9:37 I AM CHANGING FREQUENCY TO MRX."
Those were the last transmissions from the "Star Ariel", and she was never heard from again. Over 70 aircraft and many ships were involved in a search between one hundred and five hundred miles south of Bermuda, search vessels including the
aircraft carriers USS "Kearsage" and USS "Leyte", and the battleship USS|Missouri|BB-63|6, involving upwards of 13,000 men. No sign of debris, oil slicks, or wreckage were ever found. Both incidents later prompted the use of the Tudor IV aircraft to be discontinued.Bermuda Triangle connection
The loss of both aircraft without a trace, plus the unexplained vanishings of a
DC-3 south ofMiami onDecember 27 1948 , and the loss ofFlight 19 onDecember 5 1945 led theorists to speculate that something unusual was happening in the waters of the western Atlantic. The questions and theories that arose led to the creation of the Bermuda Triangle legend. [ [http://www.bermuda-triangle.org/html/the_tudors.html The Tudors ] ]New York Times articles:
*"Hope Wanes in Sea Search For 28 Aboard Lost Airliner",
January 31 1948 .*"72 Planes Search Sea For Airliner",
January 19 1949 .ee also
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Air safety
*Aviation accidents and incidents
* Avro Tudor airlinesReferences and notes
External links
* [http://www.bermuda-triangle.org/html/the_tudors.html Press release from the official investigation]
* [http://1000aircraftphotos.com/Contributions/Coates/1422.htm A picture of "Star Ariel"]
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