A SECOND World War Spitfire pilot whose remains were found in a field last year has been laid to rest in a Glasgow cemetery.
Sergeant Malcolm Robertson, 20, of the Royal New Zealand Air Force, died when his single-engined Supermarine Spitfire Mark 1 crashed in a field near the village of Westruther, Berwickshire, during a training sortie on January 16, 1943.
An initial crash inspection that year recovered parts of a uniform, dog tags and a single flight boot, which were interred at Craigton Cemetery, Glasgow, following a wartime board of inquiry.
However, an excavation of the crash site in July last year recovered pieces of the plane and also human bones.
These remains have been interred in Sgt Robertson's grave in Craigton Cemetery.
The service was conducted by RAF Prestwick Captain, Reverend David Ness, with the RNZAF represented by Squadron Leader Susie Barns.
Sqn Ldr Burns said: "He has now been reburied with the honour and dignity befitting an RNZAF pilot."
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