• Source: Solent Sky
    • Solent Sky (previously known as the Southampton Hall of Aviation) is an aviation museum in Southampton, England.
      The museum depicts the history of aviation in Southampton, the Solent area and Hampshire. There is a focus on Supermarine, the aircraft company based in Woolston, Southampton, and its most famous products, the Supermarine S.6 seaplane and the Supermarine Spitfire, designed by a team led R. J. Mitchell. There is also coverage of the Schneider Trophy seaplane races, twice held at Calshot Spit, and the flying boat services which operated from the Solent.


      History


      The forerunner to the museum was a museum focusing on Supermarine set up in the 1970s in a NAAFI hut alongside Havelock Road. In the latter part of 1982 decay of the buildings lead to the museum committee petitioning Southampton city council to build a new museum. Construction of the current building began in 1983 and was designed by Barry Eaton, then the City Architect. A Short Sandringham on loan from the science museum group was moved into the unfished building on 1 July 1983. The new museum opened 26 May 1984. On 25 November 2023 the fuselage of a BAC One-Eleven was moved to the exterior of the museum from Cornwall Aviation Heritage Centre.In November 2024 the museum was granted planning permission to build a connection between the aircraft fuselage and the main museum.


      Exhibits




      = Aircraft

      =
      Aircraft on display at the museum include:

      Avro 504J - Replica
      Britten-Norman BN-1
      de Havilland Sea Vixen FAW Mk.1 - XJ476
      de Havilland Tiger Moth
      de Havilland Vampire
      Folland Gnat
      Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR.3 - Cockpit section. Modified to resemble Harrier FRS.1
      Mignet HM.14 Pou-du-Ciel
      Saro Skeeter (x 2)
      Saunders-Roe SR.A/1 - TG263
      Short Sandringham S.25/V - VH-BRC, Beachcomber
      Slingsby Grasshopper
      Slingsby Tandem Tutor
      SUMPAC
      Supermarine Nighthawk - propellers only
      Supermarine S.6A - N248, competed in the 1929 Schneider Trophy
      Supermarine Seagull - Nose section only
      Supermarine Spitfire F.24 - PK683
      Supermarine Swift - Cockpit section
      Wight Quadruplane - Replica


      = Engines

      =
      The following engines can be seen at the museum:

      Alvis Leonides
      Alvis Leonides Major
      Bristol Siddeley Orpheus
      Bristol Proteus
      de Havilland Gipsy Major
      Gnome Monosoupape
      Metrovick Beryl
      Napier Gazelle
      Napier Lion
      Napier Naiad
      Napier Sabre
      Napier Scorpion
      Rolls-Royce/Continental 0-300
      Rolls-Royce Derwent
      Rolls-Royce Merlin


      Calshot Spit lightship



      The LV 78 Calshot Spit is a lightship built in Southampton in 1914. It was decommissioned in 1987. Between 1988 and 2010, it was located at the entrance to Ocean Village marina, which formed a static attraction at the marina. This Trinity House navigation aid had guided ships entering Southampton Water from the western end of the Solent, coming around the low lying sand and shingle Calshot Spit. It was built in 1914 by J I Thornycroft shipyard in Southampton, and decommissioned in 1978. The lightship was removed on 3 November 2010 and taken to be restored at Trafalgar Dry Dock. The lightship was to become a "gateway attraction" at a new heritage museum called Aeronautica. The plans for Aeronautica came to a halt in January 2012. In December 2019 the Calshot Spit Lightship was transported to its new home at the Solent Sky Museum with plans to convert it into part of the museum's cafe.


      Other items


      In 2017 an exhibition by the Hampshire Police and Fire Heritage Trust was added to the museum. In September 2020, three of Southampton's former trams were moved to the museum site. There are plans for the trams to undergo restoration before going on public display.


      Charity


      The work of Solent Sky is supported by a registered charity, the R. J. Mitchell Memorial Museum Limited, whose objects are "to advance the education of the public in matters relating to aviation by establishing and maintaining a museum as a permanent memorial to R. J. Mitchell, the designer of the Schneider Trophy S6B seaplane and the Spitfire."


      See also


      List of aerospace museums


      References




      Further reading


      Solent Sky Aviation Museum (2014). Souvenir Guide Book. Southampton, UK: Solent Sky.
      Solent Sky Museum. "Solent sky: the house magazine of Solent Sky Museum". Southampton, UK. OCLC 1223597706.


      External links



      Official website
      R. J. Mitchell website (self-published website, now inactive)
      Profile at Aviation Museums of the World

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