In April 1941, during the Second World War, all 6 of the crew on board an
Avro Anson were killed when the aircraft crashed on Ben More Assynt. Due to the inaccessibility of the crash site, the crew were buried on the mountain; their final resting places marked with a cairn. In 2012, the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission decided to replace the existing cairn, which had deteriorated in the harsh climate, with a 600-kilogramme granite marker to identify and protect the burial site. At an elevation of around , the burial site on Ben More Assynt is one of the Commission's most remote grave sites in the UK and the logistics of replacing the cairn have proved challenging. In the end, a
Chinook helicopter from
RAF Odiham had to be used to carry the granite memorial to the burial site. The granite memorial now marks the spot where Pilot Officer William Drew, Sergeant Jack Emery, Sergeant Harold Arthur Tompsett, Flying Officer James Henry Steyn, Sergeant Charles McPherson Mitchell and Flight Sergeant Thomas Brendon Kenny lost their lives when their aircraft crashed. == Gallery ==