- TitleHandwritten notes on the Hawker Siddeley Nimrod
- ReferenceYMS0020/6/6
- Production date01-01-1979 - 31-12-1984
- Harrison, JimmyBiographyBiographyJames Gordon Harrison, known as ‘Jimmy’, flew with the RAF before joining AVRO as a test pilot in 1949, charged with making the revolutionary AVRO Vulcan delta-wing aircraft safe to fly. Harrison was born in Portsmouth in 1918. He left school and joined the RAF aged 16, starting his aviation career as an aircraftman fitter. With the outbreak of the Second World War, he applied to become a pilot and completed his training in Canada. Recognising his skill, the RAF retained him as a flight instructor and he remained in Canada until 1944. He then joined 605 squadron, flying De Havilland Mosquitos with a particular speciality in night flights. Harrison became squadron leader. Following the end of the war, Harrison completed the No 8 course at the renowned Empire Test Pilots’ School in Farnborough. Once again, his skill was apparent and he graduated with distinction. Harrison went on to Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) Farnborough. He began the dangerous tasks of carrying out test flights for experimental tailless, swept-back Delta jet aircraft. Following a period at the RAF's Staff College in Bracknell, Harrison joined AVRO as a test pilot in 1954. In the Cold War era Britain developed three bombers capable of delivering Britain’s nuclear deterrent onto Soviet Russia, including the AVRO Vulcan. The aircraft were beset with many handling problems, and 71 crew members were lost in V-bomber development flights. In 1958 Harrison succeeded Roland Falk as AVRO’s chief test pilot, a role he would retain as the company became part of Hawker Siddeley. With his successor Tony Blackman, he spent years developing the Vulcan bomber for missile warfare. Harrison and his team discovered that by flying at low altitude, close to the speed of sound, the Vulcan became a ‘stealth bomber’, almost undetectable by radar. This concept was then built on by the Americans. Harrison retired from test flying in 1969, taking on a new role as product support manager. By this stage he had flown more than 7300 hours in 93 different aircraft. The significance of his role in the development of the Vulcan, Hawker Siddeley 748 turboprop reconnaissance aircraft and RAF’s Nimrod aircraft was recognised nationally in 1968, when he was awarded an OBE. He had twice received the Queen's Commendation for Valuable Services in the Air twice, once as an RAF pilot, and then again whilst he was employed at Avro. In 1984 Harrison retired to Derbyshire. He passed away in 2007 and was survived by his wife and daughters.
- Scope and ContentOne page of notes on the development and testing of the Nimrod aircraft.
- LanguageEnglish
- Level of descriptionITEM
- Repository nameScience and Industry Museum
- Hawker Siddeley Group PLCBiographyBiographyHawker Siddeley Group PLC was initially formed as the Hawker Siddeley Aircraft Company on 11th July 1935. The new company was established to acquire all of the shares of the Armstrong Siddeley Development Company and 50% of the shares of the Hawker Aircraft Company. This merged the two largest British aircraft manufacturers and included the subsidiaries of the two companies involved. These consisted of Armstrong Siddeley Motors, Sir W.G. Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft Ltd and A.V. Roe and Co, which were part of the Armstrong Siddeley Development Company, and the Gloster Aircraft Company, which was part of Hawker, all of which continued to produce aircraft under their own names. During the Second World War Hawker Siddeley was one of the most important aircraft manufacturers in Britain. During the course of the conflict it produced several important designs including the Hawker Hurricane and Avro Lancaster as well as working on Britain’s first jet aircraft, the Gloster E.28/39, and the first British jet fighter, the Gloster Meteor. In 1945 the company also purchased Victory Aircraft from the Canadian government and transferred to its subsidiary Avro. This then became A.V. Roe Canada but was most often know as Avro Canada. On 22nd June 1948 the company underwent a restricting when it was transformed from a private to a public limited company and underwent a name change. As such it went from being Hawker Siddeley Aircraft Company Limited to Hawker Siddeley Group Limited. In 1957 the Hawker Siddeley Group purchased the Brush Group, which included Brush Electrical Machines and Brush Traction. At the time it also acquired Mirrlees, Bickerton and Day. It also formed Hawker Siddeley John Brown Nuclear Construction as a joint venture to produce nuclear power equipment for marine propulsion, electrical generation and other industrial applications. In 1958 it formed another join company this time with Beyer Peacock, under the name Beyer Peacock (Hymek) Ltd, in order to manufacture diesel hydraulic locomotives. 1959 saw a further joint company, Primapax, which made, hired and sold vending machines. During the late 1950s the British government decided that the number of aircraft manufacturers should be decreased as the number of contracts being offered was being reduced. As a result of this Hawker Siddeley merged all of its aviation interests, Hawker, Avro, Gloster, Armstrong Whitworth and Armstrong Siddeley, into a single division, Hawker Siddeley Aviation during October 1958. In 1959 it also merged its aircraft engine business, Armstrong Siddeley, with Bristol Aero Engines to form Bristol Siddeley Engines. The group also acquired Folland Aircraft and in 1960 purchased both the de Havilland Aircraft Company and the Blackburn Group. By 1961 the Hawker Siddeley Group was made up of 3 major operational groups, Hawker Siddeley Aviation, Hawker Siddeley Industries and A.V. Roe Canada. Avro Canada would be dissolved in 1962 due to the cancellation of the Avro Arrow aircraft with its remaining assets being transferred to Hawker Siddeley Canada. The new company focused on the manufacture of railway vehicles, subway cars and trams. In 1963 the group underwent a further restructuring as the names of its constituent companies were dropped in favour of a single Hawker Siddeley branding. As a result, the company’s products were rebranded with a HS number in place of their previous number. During 1968 the group expanded further by acquiring Crompton Parkinson, which was later combined with Brook Motors, when they acquired this company in 1970, to form Brook Crompton. On 29th April 1977 the Hawker Siddeley Group underwent a major change when, as a result of the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act, its Aviation and Dynamics groups were nationalised and merged with the British Aircraft Corporation and Scottish Aviation to form British Aerospace. Despite this loss of its aviation interests, they only accounted for 25% of the group’s business and as such it was able reorganise its remaining interests in a holding company, Hawker Siddeley Group PLC. The decision was taken to focus this group on railway engineering, industrial electronics and signalling equipment. During the 1980s the Hawker Siddeley Group continued to expand, acquiring Carlton Industries between 1981 and 1984, and GEC Small Machines Company and GEC Alsthom Electromotes in 1989. This success made the group a target for a hostile takeover by the BTR conglomerate and in November 1991 they acquired it for £1.5 billion. The Hawker Siddeley name continued to be used in the group’s switchgear division which was later sold to FKI and later Melrose PLC.
- Subject
- Conditions governing accessOpen access.
- Conditions governing ReproductionCopies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.
Creator
Associated people and organisations
Hierarchy browser