SIR DOUGLAS BADER INSPIRES THE CREATION OF THE FIRST
DISABLED FLYING DISPLAY TEAM
The Douglas Bader Foundation, a charity
set up by family and friends of
the
legendary War Hero shortly
after his death in 1982, are
launching their most exciting project to date.
The ‘Reach for the
Sky’ campaign is named after the iconic, biographical war-time movie
that helped make the double amputee and spitfire ace Group Captain Sir Douglas Bader
a house hold name. The ambitious
initiative will see the creation of the first ever British,
disabled flying display
team.
The Flying team will be known as ‘Bader’s Bus Company’. When leading the Tangmere Wing, Douglas would announce his arrival over
the French coast with the brief radio
transmission of “Bader’s Bus
Company on time’’. When word
of his capture finally
reached the Tangmere station Johnnie Johnson and the other pilots defiantly painted their spitfires
with the slogan ‘Bader’s Bus Company Still Running’.
The charity aims to support four light aircraft
that will be used to teach those with disabilities to
fly, train a team of
disabled pilots and ‘Bader’s Bus Company’ will go on to perform at airshows
throughout
the
United Kingdom.
At 11.30 on Thursday the 25th June, David Bickers, Douglas’s step son in law
and
CEO of the Douglas Bader Foundation celebrated the support of the first aircraft
which is operated by Aerobility.
David Bickers commented: ‘The project aims to
leave a
lasting legacy that is in
keeping
with
Douglas’s own
personal legacy and
to inspire both the able bodied and
disabled community
alike’.
Mike Miller –Smith,
CEO
of Aerobility added: ‘’ A very exciting opportunity
for
two charitable organisations to work together to
achieve an outstanding
goal.’’
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