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Sound of Spit-fire after 70 years in bog 11.11.11

by Linda McGrory

DEFENCE Force weapons personnel at Athlone have managed to preserve a WWII Spitfire machine gun so expertly it has fired after 70 years buried in an Inishowen bog.
It was one of six Browning guns excavated from the hillside in Gleneely in June and taken to Irish Army HQ to be made safe.
Lt Colonel Dave Sexton and his ordnance team painstakingly cleaned the weapons and repaired pieces that were damaged when the RAF fighter plane crashed at 350mph into Glenshinney Bog, Moneydarragh, in November, 1941
Its US pilot, Roland 'Bud' Wolfe managed to eject from the plane but parachuted into a diplomatic storm in neutral Irish territory.
Earlier this week, aviation historian, Jonny McNee, who discovered the wreck on the Inishowen peninsula, travelled with historian, Dan Snow, and a BBC television crew to Co Westmeath for the test firing. Mr McNee said it was a “momentous” day for everyone involved. The gun successfully fired both modern ammunition as well as rounds of original bullets excavated with the plane on the day.
"When I heard the burst of gunfire, the hairs stood on the back of my neck.
"We don't know of any other guns from an aircraft involved in such a high-speed crash that were made to fire again. I was privileged to fire the last shots that will ever come out of the gun,” said Mr McNee.
The Spitfire, paid for by wealthy Canadian industrialist, Garfield Weston, during the Battle of Britain, was remarkably well preserved in the oxygen-free Donegal peat.
Aviation historian, Jonny McNee and his son Dylan (9), during the test firing of the WWII Spitfire machine gun at Irish Army HQ in Athlone, Co Westmeath, on November 8.
Lt Colonel Sexton yesterday praised his munitions specialists for their expert restoration of the historic weapons. They have now been made safe for display.
"It was amazing to see how well the gun fired. I thought we might get a round off and have to adjust it again, but at one stage it fired 47 rounds in a single burst," he told Inishowen News.
"The guns had survived remarkably intact. People will now be able to see them in a museum as part of the plane's overall story."
Irish Defence Force personnel who worked on the preservation of the World War II Spitfire machine guns.
Mr McNee donated two of the six machine guns to the officers' mess in Athlone as a mark of appreciation for the Defence Forces’ work. It is hoped the other four will be displayed shortly in Derry.
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