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It had its origin in 1943 as a requirement identified by the Brabazon Committee[?] for a twin-engined, short to medium-haul DC-3 replacement. Airspeed was asked to prepare an unpressurised design in the 14.5 tonne gross weight class using two Bristol Hercules radials. By the time the British Ministry of Aircraft production ordered two prototypes from Airspeed, immediately after the end of the Second World War, the design had grown substantially. The Ambassador would be pressurised, have more powerful Bristol Centaurus radials, and have a maximum gross weight of almost 24 tonnes.
It offered seating for 47 passengers and, having a nosewheel undercarriage, looked far more modern than the Commandos[?], DC-3s, Lancastrians[?] and Vikings[?] that were common on Europe's shorter airline routes. With three low fins it shared something of the character of the larger trans-continental Lockheed Constellation[?]. British European Airways[?] operated up to 20 Ambassadors between 1952 and 1958, calling them "Elizabethans" in honour of the newly crowned Queen. It also helped the growth of Dan-Air[?] an important airline in the development of package holidays.
The popularity of this splendid aircraft was soon eclipsed however by the arrival of faster turboprops such as the Vickers Viscount[?] and, some years later, the Lockheed Electra[?]. Airspeed Ambassador 2 aircraft unfortunately made the headlines due to the Munich air disaster, in West Germany on 6 February 1958 (also a tragedy for English football) and a spectacular fatal crash landing at London's Heathrow Airport on 3 July 1968 by a BKS Ambassador in which several horses on board died and a parked Trident[?] was written-off just before the airliner hit terminal buildings.
One Elizabethan has been preserved by the Imperial War Museum at Duxford, Cambridgeshire[?] in eastern England.
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