Customs saves mysterious by Lisa Sweetapple he actions, in 1979, of Sydney Duntroon until 1963 when the Customs officers stopped the AWM Board of Trustees gave Tillegal export of a World War permission for the Bf 109 to be sold If German fighter plane, the to a Mr B. Wetless, of Illawarra Messerschmitt Bf 109. The aircraft Flying School, for 250 pounds. is earmarked for display within in the next three years, in Anzac Hall Finally, in February 1964, the Bf 109 at the Australian War Memorial in went on display, but not until Canberra. another change of ownership occurred. Mr Sid Marshall, of The journey for the Bf 109 began in Marshall Airways, bought the 1946 when it was packed in crates plane from Mr Wetless. Mr and sent to Australia from Marshall hung the plane in his Oxfordshire, Britain. hangar at Bankstown. Unfortunately the plane travelled without paperwork , but it is In 1979, some years after the death understood that it was sent to of Mr Marshall, the Bf 109 came to Australia as a gift from Britain for the attention of a British collector display in the National War who sought to export the aircraft to Museum. Britain. It was at this stage of the plane's journey that Customs On its arrival in Australia, the Bf officers became involved. 109 was accessioned by the Australian War Memorial (AWM), An export permit for the Bf 109 but the plane remained in its crates was denied due the rarity and at No. 1 Aircraft depot, Laverton, historical significance of the plane. Victoria, and then Tocumwal, NSW, until it was relocated to the Customs officers had been alerted completed War Memorial store at to the movements of the plane and Duntroon, Canberra, in 1955. The placed the Bankstown Airport on Bf 109 stayed packed away at 24-hour surveillance for several

The of the recovered Messerschmitt, currently being restored by Australian War Memorial curators.

JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE VOLUME 4 No 2 OCTOBER 2001 parts in a storage centre in Canberra. Curators will need to carefully remove some paint from the propeller and before the plane can be fully reassembled.

"Had it not been for the diligence of Customs officers, Australia would have lost one of its rarest - irreplaceable - aircraft specimens," the Aircraft magazine reported in 1980.

The Australian War Memorial values this plane as part of its collection and is looking forward to resurrecting it so that it can take its place on display in the newly built ANZAC Anzac hall at the Australian War Memorial for all to Australian War Memorial military weeks before the plane was packed observe and understand its technologist, Mr Michael Nelmes, in air cargo crates and prepared for significance in history. inspects the engine housing of the export. On 3 December 1979, Messerschmitt. Customs officers opened the crates Messerschmitt : the plane to reveal the Messerchmitt in pieces without an export permit. The In 1934, Professor Willy crates were seized by the Messerschmitt designed the Commonwealth and placed in Messerschmitt Bf 109G-6, more storage at an base at commonly referred to as the Me Regents Park, NSW, while legal 109, but correctly known as the Bf proceedings were undertaken. 109. Bf stands for Bayerische Flugzeugwerke, meaning it was The case was eventually settled in built in a Bavarian factory, 1987 when solicitors acting for the signifying it had been built by the British collector filed a notice of Messerschmitt company. discontinuance, with each side paying its own costs and the Today, there are only 16 intact Bf verdict for Customs. 109's left in the world. A lot of aircraft in the 1950's and 60's were Vintage aircraft enthusiasts around sold for scrap metal. An estimated the country were divided as to who 35,000 were produced by Germany should be given the seized plane, during the Second World War II. and whether it should be kept in Australia. Questions were asked The Australian War Memorial has in Parliament on a regular basis as examples of three types of progress of the investigation, as Messerschmitt single-seat fighter allegations of a deal to swap the aircraft. The first was is the Bf 109, Messerschmitt for a less significant which was propeller driven. This aircraft were made. was followed by the a rocket- powered Me 163 and a jet- After long legal proceedings, powered Me 262. Customs won possession of the plane and handed it back to the According to AWM military AWM in 1987. Since then, the technologist, Mr Michael Nelmes, Messerschmitt has remained in the Bf 109's 1800- horsepower V12

JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE VOLUME 4 No 2 OCTOBER 2001 engine is unusual in that it is A letter to the AWM in 1990 by Mr The fact frustrating AWM curators inverted. Phillip Hilt, from West Germany, is that the plane lacks any indicates that the aircraft was built unit identification. "The reason for the upside-down at Messerschmitt's Without this identification, usually engine was to improve the flow of factory around May 1944 as part of found on the body of the plane, oil through the engine. a batch of 550 Bf 109 planes. This AWM curators are unable to is supported by the serial number, ascertain when the plane served, "The Bf 109 is also supercharged as which is 163824. where it flew and what its role was it has a compressor unit so that at in the war. high altitude it can compress the Final assembly of the plane would rarefied air. It is important for most probably have been done at internal- combustion engines at Regensbu rg-Obertraubling high altitude to ensure that enough "Waldwerk Hagelstadt" — an air gets into the carburettor, to mix assembly factory in the a forest. with petrol, otherwise it won't run Test flying of the Bf 109 would then efficiently," Mr Nelmes said. most probably have been performed by the two main test The armament on the Bf 109 pilots, Herr Lohmann and Herr consisted of one 20mm or 30mm, Ertl, at the Puchhof airfield. which fired through the propeller spinner, and two MG 131 machine- An inscription painted below the guns above the engine which fired cockpit on the body is one of the through the propeller disc. The few clues to the history of the front windshield was made of aircraft. It shows that the plane was armoured glass, approximately five refurbished on 31 December 1944 in to six centimetres thick, providing Germany. Unfortunately, without protection from oncoming enemy papers, this is the last piece of fire. information known about the aircraft. The AWM considers itself lucky to possess the only Bf 109 in Australia and it is in remarkably good condition.

"One outstanding aspect of this particular aircraft is that it is the only surviving Second World War German plane with complete original paintwork in the world, and we have it," Mr Nelmes said.

"The fact that it also has some bullet damage indicates that it most probably saw combat," Mr Nelmes said.

"The Bf 109 is significant on a few different levels. Firstly, it is the only one in Australia, and secondly, it was the most important German aircraft in the Second World War, and thirdly the Bf 109 is relevant to Australians as it was the plane that Australians fought against during the war." The stripped cockpit of the Messerschmitt

JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE VOLUME 4 No 2 OCTOBER 2001