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Avro Lincoln RF398 in RAF Museum Cosford

The WW2 Era Avro Lincoln RF398 bomber is said to be haunted by an unknown ghost who has saved workers from serious injury.

By Tim TrottReported Ghosts and Hauntings • December 31, 2015
Avro Lincoln RF398 in RAF Museum Cosford

Britain has an abundance of haunted houses, castles and inns. But the RAF Museum Cosford, where hundreds of aircraft are on show, must surely possess one of the country's most unusual paranormal locations - a haunted Lincoln Bomber, RF398.

The Lincoln Bomber designated RF398, was constructed by the A.V. Roe Aircraft Co. and was once intended to be the successor to the Lancaster Bomber. Introduced in 1945, it was too late to see active service in World War II, and the coming of the jet engine soon after rendered piston engines out of date, and its usefulness proved relatively short-lived.

Stories of peculiar occurrences experienced around Avro Lincoln RF398 had been circulating since the early 1980s. The bomber was moved to RAF Museum Cosford in 1977 and was once in a sorry state of repair. RAF volunteers, alongside retired service members, devoted a substantial amount of their spare time to renovating it. One evening, shortly after the work started, a museum staff member switched off the lighting in the hangar and was locking the doors when he caught a glimpse of someone moving within the plane. Switching the lights back on, he went to investigate; however, after searching every corner of the bomber, he found no one. A volunteer was working alone inside the plane not long afterwards when he heard the rear door open and footsteps walking along the fuselage towards him. Thinking it was one of his workmates, he asked for a spanner, and one was duly handed to him. When he turned to thank the person, he was astonished to find that he was alone.

The secretary to the museum was once making ready an information board concerning the bomber when she heard a voice calling her name. Thinking it was a colleague, she turned to see what they wanted however no one else was there. Such was the effect of the ordeal that she point-blank refused to enter the hangar alone again.

One of the strangest stories is about an electrician working on a plane 4.6m (l 5ft) above the ground when he unexpectedly slipped and fell. Bracing himself for What he Was convinced would be a fatal impact, he suddenly floated to a stop and hovered above the ground. He later recalled that an invisible power had saved his life.

Nobody knows whose ghost haunts the plane, although one contender is Major Hiller, the pilot who flew the plane on its last flight on 30 April 1963. He is alleged to have been very fond of the plane and apparently promised that he would "haunt his baby". Shortly after that final flight, he was killed in a plane crash near Cosford.

Avro Lincoln bomber, serial number RF398
Avro Lincoln bomber, serial number RF398
Avro Lincoln bomber, serial number RF398
Avro Lincoln bomber, serial number RF398

You can see more pictures of Avro Lincoln RF398 in my RAF Museum Cosford photograph gallery.

About the Author

Tim Trott is a lifelong explorer of the unexplained whose fascination with the paranormal began in childhood, sparked by ghost stories, eerie encounters, and a haunted house on his school grounds. As the creator of Your Paranormal, he invites readers to journey beyond the veil and uncover the mysteries of ghosts, UFOs, mythology, and the supernatural. What began as childhood curiosity has grown into a passion for unraveling the unknown—one story, one encounter, and one mystery at a time.

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