Yorkshire Post

One final battle to preserve legacy of the Vulcan

Enthusiast­s launch Operation Safeguard to create permanent home for legendary Cold War bomber

- DAVID BEHRENS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david. behrens@ jpimedia. co. uk ■ Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

THEY WERE the vital component of Britain’s nuclear deterrent during the Cold War, and the manifestat­ion of a brief but remarkable period of postwar innovation that made British aviation technology the envy of the world.

The RAF’s delta- winged Vulcan bombers have not been flown in anger since the Falklands War of nearly 40 years ago. But in Doncaster, one final challenge awaits the last of the line.

Some five years after it flew for the last time, The Spirit of Great Britain has become once more the centre of attention with the launch of Operation Safeguard, a campaign to give it a permanent home in a hangar that will be open to all.

Volunteers and enthusiast­s are hoping to raise £ 4m to build a visitor centre around the aircraft – officially XH558 – to preserve its legacy as the last of the Vulcans in military service and the last to have been airworthy.

The charity behind the initiative is the Vulcan to the Sky Trust, which in 2007 gave the plane a new, eight- year lease of life at public events and air displays. It is unlikely ever to fly again but since its retirement the organisati­on has maintained it in taxiable condition at Doncaster Sheffield Airport.

However it will announce today that it is negotiatin­g a mortgage of up to £ 2.4m towards the cost of a new hangar. A public fundraisin­g campaign, corporate donations and sponsorshi­p will aim to raise the remaining £ 1.6m.

Dr Robert Pleming, an aviation enthusiast who leads the charity, said the installati­on of XH558 as a visitor attraction would make the airport “a destinatio­n in its own right”, rather than just a terminus from which to arrive and depart.

He said: “From the earliest days of the Vulcan to the Sky Trust’s work, the charity has always had two guiding principles, to honour those

Her awesome power and beauty generates a huge following. Dr Robert Pleming, who leads the Vulcan to the Sky charity.

who served us in the past and to inspire future generation­s to make meaningful change in the world.”

The permanent hangar would not only give XH558 a weatherpro­of home but would incorporat­e an education centre that would extend to the next generation of aircraft design, he said.

“We have always aimed to inspire youngsters to pursue careers in aerospace and engineerin­g. The innovative 1950s technology of the Vulcan is relatively easy to understand and

her awesome power and beauty generates a huge following. We need to inspire youngsters to become the engineers who will devise the required technical solutions to the global climate challenge,” Dr Pleming said.

XH558 made its first test flight on May 25, 1960, at Woodford Aerodrome, not

far from Manchester Airport, and since leaving service has been the subject of several preservati­on appeals. Some £ 6.5m in public donations and lottery funding saw it restored in flight 13 years ago, for as long as the life expectancy of crucial parts would allow. Over the next eight display seasons, it was

seen by an estimated 20 million people. Last year, a fundraisin­g drive anticipate­d the aircraft’s 60th anniversar­y by offering donors the chance to have their names etched in vinyl on a commemorat­ive plaque beneath the wings.

The public fundraisin­g drive being launched today asks

supporters to donate £ 50 or £ 30 each, in return for seeing their names on exhibits in the new exhibition centre, which is scheduled to be ready for the summer of 2022. Dr Pleming said the facility, which would be “financiall­y viable”, was “a fantastic way to leave a real legacy for the next generation”.

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 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY/ SIMON HULME. ?? INNOVATIVE INSPIRATIO­N: Kevin ‘ Taff’ Stone, chief engineer of the Vulcan to the Sky charity, standing in front of XH558. Above, left, volunteer Brian Moss in the cockpit and, right, and artist’s impression ofhow the Vulcan would be displayed in its own hangar.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY/ SIMON HULME. INNOVATIVE INSPIRATIO­N: Kevin ‘ Taff’ Stone, chief engineer of the Vulcan to the Sky charity, standing in front of XH558. Above, left, volunteer Brian Moss in the cockpit and, right, and artist’s impression ofhow the Vulcan would be displayed in its own hangar.

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