This Nova Scotian's dad flew a Spitfire during WW II. He just went to Poland to see it - Action News
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Nova Scotia

This Nova Scotian's dad flew a Spitfire during WW II. He just went to Poland to see it

When Brian Mann was a little kid growing up in Cape Breton, N.S., he'd sometimes wear his dads Second World War flying goggles, look up at the sky and imagine flying his dads Spitfire plane. At a museum in Poland in June, he got to sit in its cockpit.

'It was very emotional to see it,' says son of pilot Ed Mann

Two photos, taken more than eight decades apart, show a father and son sitting in the same Spitfire plane that father Ed Mann flew in the Second World War.
Ed Mann, above, is shown in an undated photo from the Second World War. His son, Brian Mann, is shown in his Spitfire, Florence, during a June visit to the Polish Aviation Museum in Krakow, where the plane is housed today. (Brian Mann/Peter Arnold)

When Brian Mann was a little kid growing up in Cape Breton, N.S., he'd sometimes rummage through a drawer in the family kitchen and pull out the flying goggles his father wore during the Second World War.

Mann would head outside, put on the goggles and imagine flying the Spitfire his father flew for the Royal Canadian Air Force.

"All I saw was clouds and sky," said Mann, 72."And even then I'd think to myself, 'This is what he looked at through these goggles. This is what it looked like.' And that was as close as I could ever get to his Spitfire."

Mann never got to fulfil his childhood dream of flying Ed Mann'sSpitfire. But, at a museum in Poland in June, he got to sit in the cockpit.

"It was very emotional to see itand it's something that was more than we had anticipated because you really can't get ready for it," said Mann."It all comes back to you that this is the actual plane that my father flew."

Around 20,000 Spitfires were made during the Second World War, but only a couple hundred remain. Only a few dozen are considered airworthy.

A pair of Second World War flying goggles are shown.
These are the flying goggles Mann wore during the Second World War. (Robert Guertin/CBC)

Getting to Poland to see Ed Mann's Spitfire capped a two-decade effort by his family to see the plane. Mann died in 1996, never knowing his plane had survived the war. Hisfamily only learned of its existence in 2005.

Previous trips were delayed by health issues and a death in the family, while plans to go to Poland in May 2020 were scuttled by the COVID-19 pandemic.

How the plane ended up in Poland

Ed Mann's Spitfire named Florence after his wife has had a colourfullife after the war. It appeared in the 1969 film Battle of Britain in scenes where pilots climbed in and out of Spitfires.

Brian Mann and his father attended the film at a theatre when it came out, unaware that Ed Mann's Spitfire was on the screen in front of them.

Following the film, the Spitfire was used as a mobile display aircraft for the Royal Air Force.

In 1977, it was traded with Poland in something called Operation Fair Exchange. Aviation enthusiasts viewed the swap as anything but fair because a DH9A, a First World War plane that was the only one of its kind, was sent to Britain in return.

A black and white photo shows a young man in pilot training during the Second World War.
Mann is shown during pilot training in an undated photo from the Second World War. (Brian Mann)

From there, it made its way to the Polish Aviation Museum in Krakow and was repainted to appear as an aircraft flown by a Polish unit of the Royal Air Force.

Thisis where Mannand five family members came face to face with the plane. Officials arranged for a private viewing that lasted almost two hours.

Heather MacDonald was one of the family members onthe trip. She's Brian Mann's younger sister.

"Tosit on the wing and place my hands where dad had had his, that was something else," she said.

She thinks her father would have been proud that his children were interested in his plane and cared enough to make the journey to see it.

A smiling woman with blond hair sits on the wing of a Spitfire plane at a museum in Krakow, Poland.
Heather MacDonald sits on the wing of the plane her father flew. (Brian Mann)

Also present at the viewing were some of the people who played a role in letting the Mann family know about Florence's whereabouts. That included Franek Grabowski, a Polish freelance researcher and journalist.

It was Grabowski's observation that the markings on the plane showedit had not been flown by Poles. That sparked the search effort that ultimately led to the Manns.

A Second World War flight log book is shown.
A page from Mann's flight logbook in 1944, around D-Day. (Submitted by Brian Mann)

"It was like meeting old family because we had been corresponding for so many years [with them] before finally getting over there," said MacDonald.

Brian Mann said while this was the first trip for family members to see the plane, it's a pieceof family history thatfuture generations will visit.

"With dad's plane, that means it won't be forgotten," he said."It will always be there."

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