Bob Price
From Andy Mann
Its my sad duty to let you know that Bob
Price ex Hereford Parachute Club member passed away on the 29th
September 2013, aged 67.
Bob was a stalwart member of the Club
renowned for his very dry sense of humour and liking for Polo Mints,
to hide the alcholic breath (allegedly !!), hence Bob became Bob
"Polo Mint" Price !!
His funeral is on Friday 18th October 2013 at
2.15 at Hereford Crematorium.
From Dave Howerski,
Bobs funeral was well attended.
His nephew Steve gave a nice Eulogy.
In attendance from HPC there was Mike
Townsend, John Boxall, Myself and
Andy Mann, alongside Mike Tennant and Les
Cooper . Mike Tennant
was a HPC jumper who served with Bob in
the Light Infantry and jumped
with him in the Flying Bugles display
team.Mike went on to serve in the
Metropolitan Police
It was a good event and the
mourners retired to Bob's Traditional
drinking haunt the
Brewers Arms in Hereford. There was a very interesting
montage display of
photos there , covering Bob's life , which spanned some
time as a railway
stoker, service as a merchant seaman , oil industry work in
Vietnam during the
Vietnam war , and military service in the British Army,
which includes 6
years of display jumping for the light infantry.
Despite Bob's
solitary manner and dry sense of humour he was clearly very well
liked and
respected and this was really apparent from the wide attendance
and broad
age range at his funeral. He had a really good send off.
_________________
Peter Prior
On Friday 15th April 2011 at 4am, Peter Prior passed away.
Peter was a former chairman of Bulmers, an ex-serviceman that served
with distinction within the forces during WW2 and was a great friend of
the Hereford Parachute Club and all its members.
Click the
photo to go to Peter's web page.
_______________
Bert, Shobdon air
traffic control
This is from the newspaper 'This is Herefordshire' first published on
Thursday 28 December 2000:
The voice of
Shobdon Airfield is dead at 75
A MAN whose voice welcomed in thousands of pilots from all
over the country to Shobdon Airfield has died at the age of 75, writes
CATHERINE SHOVLIN.
Albert Frederick Wear was a lifetime engineer and a respected
member of the Herefordshire Aero Club.
He helped to form the county's Parachute Club, which was
allowed in to the top-secret grounds of the SAS at Bradbury Lines.
Mr Wear's interest in flying was boosted by his first
engineering job working for Barronia Metals in Blueschool Street, Hereford,
making fuel system parts used on Spitfires, Hurricanes and Lancasters.
In 1946, after serving in the army, he became a supervisor at
Aeroparts, which was based at the site where Safeway supermarket now stands
in Commercial Road.
Business interests
His first task there was starting production of Land Rover
four-wheel drive components and Ford Dexter tractor parts.
He went on to work for Praills as a machine shop manager and
then, with Teddy Praill, formed Midwest Engineering in 1965.
Mr Wear's other business enterprises included JD Engineering
and Hereford Metal Finishers, which he set up with son Michael shortly
before retiring. In his spare time he was a sporting motorcyclist and a
member of the Wye Valley Auto Club.
His Herefordshire Parachute Club used aircraft based at
Shobdon and trained at the SAS camp at Bradbury Lines. Members were also
allowed to use the special service's equipment. Mr Wear made his first jump
at Shobdon in 1960.
He qualified as a pilot in 1970 and served many years as an
air traffic controller at Shobdon.
____________________
Paul Wayne Kibblewhite
(Kipper)
Paul was one of
nine Swansea
Parachute Club members that died together when the Chinook helicopter they
were in crashed at Mannheim, West Germany on September 11, 1982. In all I
believe 46 people lost their lives, 38 skydivers,
seven United States soldiers and one United States
airman perished when a synchronising
gearbox failed on the helicopter.
The skydiver
nationalities were 23 French, 9 British and 6 West German.
Paul is the middle being
checked out on the manifest. Mark Owen is the static line jumper on the
right and Sid Lippett is facing the camera smiling. Also looks like Rick
Shaw with the white jumper on? Dave Fuller on left in white t-shirt and
camera around neck.
Kipper on the top of the 2 man
CRW and exiting.
Kipper's Story
Kipper was staying in the
Mortimer's Cross one night (probably with a lady friend !!) (you wouldn't
believe the number of lady friends that turned up at his funeral !!) when
the following morning on the way to Shobdon he was stopped by the police,
about 300 yards from the Mortimers, the police noticed he did not have a tax
disc, unusual I know for a parachutist!!.
Kipper explained it away like
this
"As I opened the car door in the car park to get into the car the tax disc
dropped out and blew into the car park at that moment a passing dog picked
up up the disc and ran away up the road I was giving chase to the dog in my
car to reclaim the disc when you stopped me.
" I don't think the policeman
believed him !!
Photo's and story by Andy Mann
____________________
Some new
photo's sent to me by one of Paul's friends Mark Newdick when he and Paul
and others were in the RNR at Cardiff. Mark describes them.
The first photo
was taken in 1978 with Paul at the helm of "Valsheda", a 40' sloop we'd
rented for the weekend. We were leaving Jersey.
The second photo is
leaving
Cowes in May 1978. Names are Carey, Unknown (girl), self, Kipper, Terry
and Maggie (Kipper's friend)
Third photo is
as above (though I'm now taking
the picture) and Tom Winstanley poking his
head over the cabin and the
forth photo is again on "Winkle Picker"
and taken in May 1978.
Click on
images
___________________
Pat Keeley
(Pat the Carpet)
John Speight, Pat Keeley and
John Coughlin
Paul Webb, John Speight,
Phillip Ainsworth, John Coughlin, Pat Keeley
Photo's from Phil Ainsworth
_______________
Graham Cross
John Boxall writes:
Graham Cross was a member of
the Hereford Aero club for many years and the backbone in developing the
club to what it has become today, he was a field manager at the Midland
Electricity Board in Hereford and assisted in redirecting power lines
and painting high vis i.d. on many poles at Shobdon to benefit the
parachute operation. He spent many hours as air traffic controller
during parachuting operations to ensure a safe system of aircraft and
helicopter movements was in place.
Graham single-handedly built and wired up the aircraft
flight simulator in the classroom under the control tower which went on
to train many pilots prior to them taking to the air for the first time.
But his biggest contribution
to the parachute club was is selfless dedication to flying the jumpship,
he became the clubs chief pilot and flew almost every weekend for many
years dropping jumpers. When we held the National Parachute
championships at Shobdon Graham spent most of the day in the air and
visiting jumpers were heard to comment that they never had the need to
feed him corrections to the opening point - he would just put it there
every time ! (the only thing Graham did get fed was the odd sandwich
whilst climbing to altitude).
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