HomeCommunity and SupportHow One Veteran’s Spitfire Dream Came True

How One Veteran’s Spitfire Dream Came True

An elderly man sits in the cockpit of a vintage aircraft named "Spirit of Kent," once a pathfinder for the Royal Navy, inside a hangar.

76-year-old John Llewellyn was overwhelmed by the lengths the RAF’s leading welfare charity went to, to fulfil his dying wish after he contacted them for practical help following a terminal cancer diagnosis…

John was watched by his entire family, siblings, his three children, eight grandchildren including one watching online from Taiwan, and two new great-grandsons as staff at Biggin Hill Heritage Hanger helped him into the aircraft. Even Spitfire pilot Don Sigournay paid his own respects, dipping the wings of his Spitfire in tribute to John’s service as he flew past the hangar.

 

Pathfinder Logo

Get weekly jobs and transition advice. Unsubscribe anytime.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

John’s daughter Tracy Weager said: “When I first told dad ‘get your flying jacket cleaned, we’re going to Biggin Hill’ he burst into tears. He said to me, ‘how did you know that was on my bucket list?’ Even though he worked on planes in the RAF, it was a childhood dream of his to sit in a Spitfire.

“On the day he was overwhelmed by it all. He could not believe that the RAF Benevolent Fund would do that for him, that they would go out of their way to make one of his dreams come true. He said it was beyond what he had ever imagined. Dad is usually a really talkative man, and he was just overwhelmed and sat back and took it all in.”

John’s love of the Spitfire began when as a young boy he watched the iconic aircraft fly in and out of Ringway Airport in Manchester and it was this experience which inspired him to join the RAF as soon as he could, aged 18 and a half. Happily for John his first posting as an armourer was spent working on his beloved Spitfire before he moved on to working with the Vulcan aircraft.

Sadly John fell ill during a tour to Borneo and the disease he contracted led to a loss of hearing in both ears and he was medically discharged in 1965. Then in the early 1980s, John was diagnosed with meningitis and had to have a metal plate inserted into his skull to halt the spread of the disease. Unfortunately this meant John could no longer work on a full-time basis.

In 1987, the RAF Benevolent Fund stepped in to provide support to allow John and his wife Magdalene to stay in their home in Gloucester where their three children had grown up and the Fund have been supporting the family ever since.

When John first received his devastating cancer diagnosis, the Fund acted quickly to install a stair lift into the family home within a week, ensuring he could remain at home for as long as possible.

 


 

A veteran smiling next to the McDonald's logo on a white background, embracing life on Civvy Street.

 


 

Michael Brash
Michael Brashhttp://PathfinderInternational.co.uk
Michael Brash is a Publisher and Communications Professional at Baltic Publications, a UK-based publishing company. He has held editorial leadership roles at the company's publications, including Pathfinder International Magazine, the leading UK military resettlement publication, and Changing Careers Magazine. He brings expertise in communications, marketing, and publishing across sectors including armed forces resettlement and career development.
RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -

Most Popular