The
Southern Clouds fate remained a mystery for 27 years until 26 October 1958. On that day, Thomas Sonter, a carpenter from New Zealand employed on the
Snowy Mountains Scheme, made a chance discovery of the wreck while hiking. The crash site was in heavily timbered mountainous terrain within the
Snowy Mountains about east of the direct Sydney–Melbourne route. Not only was the wreckage off course, it was facing the wrong direction. Investigations concluded that the severe weather conditions at the time of the flight most likely contributed to the crash. In
Don Bradman's book
Farewell to Cricket he mentions that he flew in
Southern Cloud with pilot Shortridge from Adelaide to Melbourne, then to Goulburn not long before the tragedy. He described the trip as a 'bumpy journey'. After the discovery of the wreckage, a large memorial incorporating salvaged parts from the plane was erected in the nearby town of
Cooma. The crash site is north west from
Deep Creek Dam; there is a small stream adjacent to the crash site named Shortridge Creek which is a tributary of Deep Creek a short way downstream of the dam. It is unclear when the pilot's name was assigned to the stream or by whom. ==See also==