ontario fighter plane crash

Replica WW2 fighter plane crashes in Ontario for the second time

A replica World War II fighter plane crashed in an Ontario field on Monday, and it's the second time that this exact aircraft has crashed in the last several years.

The OPP reported an increased police presence in the area of Highway 26 between Strongville Rd. and Richardson Rd., due to a plane that had crashed in a farm field. Police reported that the single occupant of the aircraft — a two-thirds scale replica of a WWII-era P-51 Mustang — was uninjured.

The plane reportedly crashed just a few kilometres southeast of Edenvale Aerodrome in Stayner, ON.

One commenter noted that this stroke of luck was actually the second instance of this plane crashing and the pilot walking away uninjured.

Records show that this same aircraft crashed on August 20, 2017, while landing at Muskoka Airport in Gravenhurst. According to the Transportation Safety Board, the 2017 crash of this aircraft was the result of a gear failure during a forced landing, and the pilot was not injured.

Approximately 15,000 P-51s were produced during WWII, with only about 150 still airworthy over three-quarters of a century later. Luckily, the aircraft involved is only a scaled-down replica, and looks like it will survive to fly another day.

Lead photo by

OPP Central Region/X


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

What's open and closed on Victoria Day 2024 in Toronto

The breathtaking Mast Trail in Toronto follows a 200-year-old logging route

Moore Park Ravine is an escape from the city in midtown Toronto

The history of what was once Toronto's grandest mansion

This is how Toronto celebrated Victoria Day over 100 years ago

You can take in breathtaking valley views along the Vista Rouge Trail in Toronto

Downsview Park in Toronto is a massive urban park around an artificial lake

Canada is seeing one of the worst standard-of-living declines in 40 years