A British passenger plane made in Yeadon has been found more than 50 years after it crashed in the Andes.
The converted Avro Lancastrian, discovered by climbers 16,500ft up the south face of the 20,000ft Mount Tupungato in Argentina, was found with the fully-clothed bodies of four people - preserved in ice and snow by the permanently freezing temperatures.
The British South American Airways plane - the Star Dust - crashed after disappearing during a storm on a scheduled flight from London to the Chilean capital Santiago on August 2, 1947.
According to records, eight Britons were among the 11 people on board - three of the six passengers and all five of the crew. All have been listed as missing, presumed dead, since the plane went down.
Gerald Myers, from Tranmere Park, Guiseley, whose book Mother Worked at Avro told the story of the Avro Factory at Yeadon, said out of six Lancastrian bombers converted for civilian flights at Yeadon, four crashed.
He said: "The Star Dust was one of six converted to type at the Avro's huge factory at Yeadon during late 1945 and the early months of 1946. All saw service with the BSAA, three sharing a similar fate, albeit in different locations to Star Dust."
Mr Myers said travelling by air in the few years after the war until the arrival of proper civilian aircraft was a dangerous business. Mr Myers, who is busy planning celebrations to mark this year's 60th anniversary of the opening of the Avro Factory, added: "It is fascinating that the plane has been found but also rather sad. But at least the bodies can be laid to rest."
The find in the Andes has been described by experts as a unique piece of aviation history. The fuselage appears to have shattered into small pieces on impact, but a propeller, a piece of wing and an oxygen canister were in 'near perfect' condition.
An Argentine judge has ordered DNA tests to be carried out on the bodies to determine their identities. It will be for the judge to decide whether efforts should be made to retrieve the bodies.
Converted for the new archive on 30 June 2000. Some images and formatting may have been lost in the conversion.
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