A SPECIAL presentation has taken place at the Lakeland Motor Museum to mark the handover of unique artefacts off the trailer which carried Donald Campbell’s famous jet hydroplane Bluebird K7.

2017 marks 50 years since Donald Campbell’s tragic death on Coniston Water in January 1967. He broke eight world speed records on water and land in the 1950s and 1960s, and became an international hero for his achievements.

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Two of the transport wheels from the trailer/launch trolley, which was used for Bluebird’s record-breaking attempts, have now been donated to the Bluebird Project, and will go on display at The Ruskin Museum in Coniston.

Originally, nose wheels from a rare Vickers Varsity plane, the wheels have a two-foot diameter and had previously been gifted to the Backbarrow-based attraction.

However, Museum bosses believe their spiritual home is in Coniston where they can sit on a replica trailer alongside the original Bluebird K7, which is currently being rebuilt to full working condition.

Director of the Lakeland Motor Museum, Bill Bewley, said: “We are pleased to donate these artefacts to the Bluebird Project, so the restoration team can put them onto their reconstructed trailer where we feel they rightly belong.

“The Lakeland Motor Museum has always had a good relationship with the Campbell family since the days when our founder, Don Sidebottom, started collecting memorabilia, and the three full-sized replicas which we display in our Campbell Bluebird Exhibition. It is an incredible story of courage and determination, so re-uniting the wheels with the Bluebird K7’s restoration project seems only fitting.”

Bill Smith, from the Bluebird Project, added: “To say that we were astounded that these precious items had survived, tucked away for so many years, would be an immense understatement. We’re extremely grateful to the museum for giving us this opportunity.”