Michael John "Mike" Lithgow
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Born | (1920-08-30)30 August 1920 |
Died | 22 October 1963(1963-10-22) (aged 43) |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/ | Royal Navy |
Years of service | 1939–1945 |
Rank | Lieutenant Commander |
Battles/wars | World War II |
Awards | OBE |
Michael John Lithgow, OBE (30 August 1920 – 22 October 1963) was a British aviator and chief test pilot for Vickers Supermarine who became the holder of the World Absolute Air Speed Record in 1953 flying a Supermarine Swift. He died when the prototype BAC One-Eleven airliner crashed in 1963.
Mike Lithgow was born on 30 August 1920 and educated at Cheltenham College.
Lithgow was a member of the Fleet Air Arm from March 1939 – December 1945. As a Lieutenant CommanderonHMS Ark Royal, he flew Swordfish torpedo bombers and was one of the pilots attacking the Bismarck.[1][better source needed]
He retired from the Navy and moved to Vickers Supermarine as a test pilot in January 1946 and became the company's chief test pilot two years later.
In September 1946 he took part in the Lympne high speed air race, flying a Supermarine Seafang, competing against Bill Humble in a Hawker Fury, Geoffrey de Havilland in a D.H. Vampire and G.H Pike in a D.H. Hornet[2]
On 26 September 1953, flying the Supermarine Swift F.4 prototype, WK198, Lithgow broke the World Air Speed Record near Tripoli in Libya, reaching a speed of 735.7 mph (1184 km/h). He was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Aero Club and the Geoffrey de Havilland Trophy in 1953[3]
He did extensive test flying on the Supermarine Attacker, Swift, Scimitar and later the Vickers Vanguard and BAC 1–11.[3]
Lithgow died test flying the prototype BAC One-Eleven G-ASHG from Wisley airfield on 22 October 1963 when during stall tests the aircraft entered a deep stall and crashed near Chicklade, Wiltshire. Six other BAC flight test team members were also killed.[3]
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