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Woods Airways
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Information
IATA Code: -
ICAO
Code: -
Known
As: Woods Airways
Full
Name: Woods
Airways Service
Country:
Australia
Callsign:
Unknown
WOODS,
JAMES (1893-1975), aviator, was born on 14 November 1893 at Udny,
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, fourth son of Charles Wood, journeyman
shoemaker, and his wife Elizabeth, née Anderson. Educated at the
local village school and at Robert Gordon's College, Aberdeen, at 14
Jimmy was apprenticed with a firm of automotive engineers and later
became a chauffeur.
He migrated in 1914 to New Zealand where he learned
to fly. In England in 1918, he was commissioned in the Royal Air Force
as an observer officer. He then worked in New Zealand and Scotland
before joining Western Australian Airways in 1924.
He flew passengers
and cargo between Perth and the north-west ports. Well-groomed, genial,
painstaking and imperturbable in a crisis, 'Woodsie' was seldom seen
without his pipe, though it was rarely lit.
On 5 June 1928 he married
Mary (Mollie) Elizabeth Hadwiger at the registry office, Port Hedland;
they were to remain childless.
Flying The Spirit
of Western Australia, a De Havilland 60 Moth with a
Gipsy II engine, in 1933 Woods—as he had long styled himself—attempted
to break J. A. Mollison's record eight-day flight from Australia to
England.
Fierce monsoons and a damaged aircraft delayed his progress,
causing him to take more than six weeks to complete the journey. Upon
landing in England, he said: 'My name is Woods and I've just flown from
Australia'.
Next year he entered the Melbourne centenary air race: with
D. C. Bennett, he flew a Lockheed Vega for London, but crash-landed at
Aleppo, Syria. Returning home in November 1934, Woods became route
manager for MacRobertson-Miller Aviation Co. Ltd.
Responsible for
several remarkable rescue operations, in 1942 he
air-lifted survivors of the Japanese bombing at Broome and later
rescued the passengers and crew of a beached Dutch Navy plane.
Woods
was appointed chevalier to the Order of Orange-Nassau (1943). On 1
January 1944 he was attached to the Royal Australian Air Force Reserve
as a temporary squadron leader.
An original 'seat of the pants' airman,
he was happiest flying small planes by backing his own judgment and
even effected repairs to his aircraft in flight.
Increasing
instrumentation, however, made his methods outmoded. In 1946, while
taking off in a Lockheed Electra from Broome in fog, he crashed into
mangroves.
No one was seriously injured, but the plane was irreparably
damaged. Woods's licence was suspended and his services with M.M.A.
were terminated.
In 1948 he began
the Woods Airways service which provided regular
flights in two Avro Ansons from Perth to Rottnest Island: 'It's just a
hop'. In constant conflict with the Department of Civil Aviation over
minor infringements of regulations, Woods Airways was wound up in 1962
when Ansons were declared unsafe for carrying passengers and for
flights over water.
Woods was appointed M.B.E. in 1963. The Jimmy Woods
[Air] Terminal at Rottnest Island was later named after him.
At 70, he
began Woods Helicopters Pty Ltd which undertook aerial spraying
operations, charter flights for oil and mineral companies, advertising
and joy rides. He sold the business in 1971 and returned to Albany.
Survived by his wife, he died there on 9 May 1975 and was cremated with
Presbyterian forms.
Logo: (No
logo found to date - This is a photo of a Woods Airways advertising
sign)
Information
Source:
Logo: http://www.liswa.wa.gov.au/
History: http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A120630b.htm
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