Coral Sea Crash final
Transcription
Coral Sea Crash final
AN ITALIAN ADVENTURE by Commander Jim Waldron USNR (Retired) When I first reported to Helicopter Utility Squadron Two (HU-2) I learned that new pilots were expected to make one or two short training cruises aboard ships operating off the coast of the Eastern United States before making a long cruise to the Mediterranean Ocean. For my introduction to helicopter rescue operations I made a two week cruise aboard the U.S.S. Siboney, a small aircraft carrier that rolled and pitched at every wave that passed under its bow. On the day I made my first helicopter landing aboard a ship the weather consisted of high winds and high seas. The Siboney met the challenge of the weather head on and the after portion of the flight deck where I was scheduled to land pitched badly. I found it next to impossible to find a moment when the deck wasn’t falling away from my hovering helicopter only to be followed by the deck rushing up intending to crash into the underside of my helicopter. Try as I might I could not synchronize my helicopter positioning with that of the heaving flight deck. I had been told that in rough weather and a badly pitching deck you should wait and in time the ship would stabilize for a moment or two at which time a smooth landing would become possible. Unfortunately that moment never seemed to arrive. At that time I recalled the joke I had heard back in the squadron ready room that if you had trouble landing aboard a ship in rough weather that a Marine assigned to the ship would come out on to the flight deck and shoot you down. I knew this was just another sick joke but I also realized that had the story been true I had just arrived at the time when a shoot down was the next option for the officer in charge of air operations. Finally I started feeling very tired at my efforts to get the helicopter firmly on the deck so I grabbed a brief moment when the ship was changing direction from dropping away to rushing upward and I firmly put my helicopter down. My flight deck crew rushed to get the tie downs hooked to my wheels and at last I was firmly attached to the ship. I later flew off several dozen ships, under varied weather conditions but landing was never again as difficult as my first flight deck landing on the Siboney. After my return to my squadron at N,A.S. Lakehurst, N.J. I discovered I had been scheduled to make a six month Mediterranean cruise aboard the U. S.S. Coral Sea (CVB-43). Lieutenant Ray Rice was assigned as the Officer-in-Charge of our shipboard detachment. During our six months tour of the Mediterranean Ocean aboard the USS Coral Sea (CVB-43) with it’s contingent of over 1,000 military men there were only one helicopter and two helicopter pilots assigned to the ship. Our flight operations started each day at sunup and ceased at sundown. Ray Rice and I split the day in halves so we each accumulated approximately the same amount of flight time. After each two weeks of flight operations the ship would cease operations for a few days so the ship’s crew could rest and take liberty in one of the exotic cities which surrounded the Mediterranean. Over our six months Mediterranean cruise we visited Gibraltar; Sicily; Cannes, France; Naples, Italy; Genoa, Italy; Athens, Greece; Caglieri, Sardinia; Oran, Algeria; and Taranto, Italy all of which contained a lot interesting places to be visited and restaurants where exotic meals could be consumed. Since we had only one helicopter aboard the ship and just two pilots, one pilot had to be on board always t take care of emergencies that might arise. That meant that Ray Rice and I could not go on liberty together and since we went at different times we each returned to the ship with different impressions of what we had observed. Both of us realized that we would have enjoyed our visit to Mediterranean ports a lot more had we been able to travel together and share our experiences together. Early during our cruise the ship made a scheduled stop at the Port of Genoa, Italy. Just before we anchored off Genoa the ship launched its single engine SNJ Texan aircraft which then flew to Genoa’s inland airfield. This is where shipboard aviators who held full time jobs that required them to remain on board during flight operations got a chance to fly and maintain their flight efficiency. The pilots who took off from the ship would fly all morning, while a contingent group boarded a bus which drove them over the mountains to that inland airfield where they would fly the aircraft and maintain their proficiency during the rest of the daylight hours. Ray Rice, as Officer-in-Charge of our detachment, opted to take the first day’s liberty period, leaving me on board to handle any emergency flight operations that might arise. Sometime around noon I was scheduled to fly our helicopter from the ship to Genoa’s inland airfield to pick up the group of pilots who had flown the Texan aircraft during the morning hours. Since there were four pilots to be picked up and I had seats for only four passengers I did not take an air crew member with me. After takeoff I flew over the coastal mountains where the four pilots had been waiting for me to arrive. I was quite surprised to then see Ray Rice climb into the helicopter telling me that he wanted to fly back to the ship with me as well as the four aviators I already had aboard. I had no seat for Ray Rice and told him so. He insisted he could sit on the floor of the helicopter. He was my Officer in Charge so I told him he could come along even though he had no restraints should a crash landing take place during the return to the ship. It was a beautiful afternoon, with a cloudless sky and little wind, so the helicopter handled well, however, it took more engine power to get off the ground because of the extra load I was carrying. In heading back to the ship I had to climb high enough to clear the steep mountains that surrounded the city of Genoa. Just as I reached the peak of the mountain range my engine quit suddenly. I immediately reduced the pitch on my rotor blades to place the helicopter into autorotation and thus be able to make a crash landing ahead. Unfortunately there were no areas ahead of me where I could safely put down the aircraft; the mountains were too steep and no level space was in sight. Just as the situation looked hopeless the engine roared back to life and it gave me the power to clear the steep sides of the mountains. Unfortunately when I applied climb power the engine again quit. I again reduced the pitch of my rotors which was followed by the engine coming back to life again. So I made several rotor pitch adjustment and I learned I could hold enough lift in my rotor blades to extend my downward glide thus giving me a chance to land somewhere clear of those deadly mountain peaks. I might mention that Ray Rice, who was seated on the floor next to me had on the air crew member's radio headset and he was constantly telling me what he thought I should be doing. Since he could be of no help to me because I had the flight controls an the feel of the aircraft I ignored all he was telling me. We were over a very heavy industrialized section of Genoa and high tension wires went in all directions. I must admit, however, that I have no recall of seeing any of them. I did see a semi-dry riverbed just ahead of me and since it was the only clear space available I headed for it. Just ahead of me a large stone bridge crossed the river telling me that I would have to touch down before I reached it because the little bit of engine power I was having wouldn’t get me over that looming stone structure. In my mind I picked out a spot of dry ground where I intended to land. Ray Rice, who was still on the inter-phone had picked up another dry spot where he wanted me to land. Again I ignored what he was telling and continued to flare over my chosen landing spot. Normally I would have touched down with a rolling landing however I could see that the sandy bottom of the riverbed was too soft for such a landing so I did a nose high flare and once my forward motion stopped I used my rotors in an attempt to soften my landing. The helicopter touched down quite hard but the landing gear did not collapse. All of us emerged from the aircraft thankful that we all survived and that the aircraft had sustained no damage. Ray Rice and I got together and decided what we should do next. Ray decided that I should remain with the downed aircraft and he should return to the ship to coordinate getting a replacement engine to the site so the helicopter could be again made flyable. It took a while to obtain transportation back to the ship but once things were arranged it all took place rather easily. One of the things that amazed me was how soon the crash scene filled with onlookers. People poured out of buildings and others raced down the streets since most of the Italians of that date (1952) had never seen a helicopter and here in their neighborhood sat one that fell out of the sky. For a good while I was quite busy circling the aircraft to keep the populace clear of the airframe because everyone wanted to touch this machine that Crash Site had fallen from the sky. As I asked the curious folks on one side of the helicopter to move away from one side of the aircraft others seemed to encroach on the other side. I went from one side to the other side of the aircraft and it seemed I was loosing the fight to keep curious folk from damaging the outside of the aircraft. I feared that it would not be long before one or more of the mob would enter the cabin and do damage to the vital control parts of the aircraft. After all I was one person with no authority and there were fifty or more of them. I never found out how it came about but suddenly a group of city police officers turned up and following my use of many hand signals, and some English words which they didn’t seem to understand, the police went to work and soon drove the excited populace away from the aircraft and up on to a hill clear of the crash site. This left me and my helicopter free of curiosity seekers allowrd my repair crew, when they arrived from the ship, to make the needed engine replacement. It was a constant worry for me that someone would pilfer a small but vital part of the aircraft which would keep us from taking off once the new engine was installed. I was very grateful to the city of Genoa, Italy for providing us with 24 hour per day police coverage so the security of our helicopter was no longer a problem for me. Meanwhile Ray Rice, who had returned to the ship, arranged to have our spare aircraft engine sent out to us, also arranged that our maintenance crew be offloaded to do the engine installation. They showed up at the crash site before dark and immediately went to work getting the helicopter ready for an engine change. They carefully removed the rotor blades and then removed the replacement engine from its container. They worked continuously until late in the evening, at which time I thought they should quit for the night and get some rest. I arranged for hotel rooms for everyone and got transportation to and from the center of town where they would stay. Next I loaded the whole crew into vehicles provided by the ship and took them individually to their hotels and saw that they checked it to their hotel rooms. Once this was done I went to my hotel where I took my rest from a traumatic day, a day of stressful activity that I had never expected to see. I placed an early morning call at my hotel desk so we could have a full day replacing our helicopter engine. I ate a good breakfast and then I boarded our ship provided vehicles to round up my maintenance crew. Much to my surprise none of my maintenance crew had slept in the rooms I had obtained for them. Following suggestions given to me by desk clerks from the hotels where my crew was supposed to have spent the night, I cruised through town, visited various bars and nightclubs and soon I had my entire crew in hand. None of them seemed to have slept, however, they were all energized and seemed ready to get to work on making the engine change. As my second day at the crash site went forward I found myself highly pleased at the enthusiasm shown by my repair crew as they tackled the difficult job of changing engines with a minimum of equipment. The river bed, as it gave up its moisture became quite dusty so extreme care had to be taken to keep the river bed dust from entering into the engine and its parts. I worried, too, about my six rotor blades spread out on the river sand, thinking that someone might trip over them and damage them leaving me with a working engine but unable to fly. This worry proved unnecessary because the Genoa police kept onlookers well clear of the equipment spread out on the sand. As mentioned before we were constantly under surveillance of an interested group of Italians who spent hours observing the repair work being accomplished. They never seemed to tire and our entire period in the river bed was never without a large group of onlookers. On my second day at the crash site an Italian gentleman, who spoke English with a British accent, joined us in the river bed and acted as our interpreter. I don’t know if he was sent to help us or if he did it on his own, but he made things a lot easier and reduced the expected confusion. He told me that he had spent World War II in England and learned to speak English as a temporary resident. He told me that the crash site, which was a highly industrialized area of Genoa here many of the communist fold lived. Looking back on what he told me about his life and his training I concluded that he, too, was a Communist. In spite of this he seemed eager to help me in any way that he could. After a full day of replacing the engine I again suggested that we quit for the day and take our needed rest in the center of Genoa. We had been given a deadline for meeting the ship within a week in the harbor of Taranto, Italy which was on the lower end of the Italian Peninsular. The crew knew that if they completed the engine change quickly that they would have a bit of free time available to them while they awaited the return of the ship. The following morning, when I gathered them all with my assigned vehicles, they seemed rested and ready to complete the job ahead. Around noon my crew chief told me the helicopter was ready to be test flown. As usual there was a large crowd of onlookers on the hill next to the riverbed where I had made the emergency landing. Once I had the engine warmed and ready for takeoff I started to come to a hover. Immediately the dried sand was blown by the rotor blades forming a large cloud. Instead of hovering at around ten feet above the surface I had to climb to around 50 feet of height above the river bed so I could see clearly. The dust my rotors had kicked up covered my view of the spectators gathered on the hill and I was unable to see them because the dust I had blown over them had hidden them from my sight. I presume they all needed a fresh Pisa bath when they reached home. Following my thirty minute hover over the river bed I flew to the nearby Italian base I had been instructed to fly to for refueling the helicopter. After shutting down my engine I found the helicopter to look a mess and needed a good wash. I didn’t want to stop to do that because I wanted to put some miles on the aircraft before quitting for the night. I decided to take my crew chief with me in the helicopter and have the rest of my repair crew travel by road in the ship’s motor vehicles. Our detachment tools and the failed engine were loaded on one of the trucks which had been left behind by the Coral Sea for the long trip southward. So after receiving a full load of fuel at the Italian base where I had landed I took off headed southward. South of Genoa the mountains moved to the shoreline forcing me to fly over the open water for some fifty miles with just open water below me. Open water alone didn’t bother me so much, but, flying with a new and untested engine was an immediate concern of mine. I have to admit that the possibility that I might have to crash land in open water when my flight was not being monitored by anyone was a real concern of mine. After about forty-five minutes I arrived at a point on the map where the mountain range ended and I could then continue my flight over land. Before takeoff I had studied my maps and I noted that I would pass over the city of Pisa. I wanted to have a photograph of the Leaning Tower of Pisa and since I could not take my hands off the flight controls long enough to take a picture with my camera, I asked my crew chief to use my camera to obtain the shot. I flew down quite low and made a complete 360 degree circle of that beautiful building and once I completed the turn I resumed my heading southward. I asked my crew chief if he had taken the picture I had requested. He assured me that he did, but later the picture came back from development showing the tower very clearly, however, he took the picture when the tower was leaning toward the helicopter and it appeared to be straight up vertical. The poor fellow must have felt insecure leaning out the window of the helicopter with my camera in his hands hat his only thoughts must have been to get the job done and get it done fast. After departing the Pisa area I headed outhward towards a landing at a military base just outside of Grosseto. As I continued southeastward I passed numerous towns, cities and villages. People gathered on the roads and streets stopped whatever the might have been doing and either waved or stared since helicopters were rare sight throughout Italy. I flew close to one walled city which was built on a small but steep hill. I could understand how such a town, with its surrounding walls and steep sides, was able to defend itself better during the Middle Ages, however, the difficulties met with getting in and out of the town would have been a daily chore. The streets were very narrow also and traffic jambs must have been a daily problem. As my helicopter and I approached the army base at Grosseto I was amused to see a soldier standing close by the place he wanted me to land. What amused me was that he held a lit smoke flare in his hand, something that I considered unnecessary, but in the least accommodating. My helicopter was able to land headed in any direction when the wind force was not excessive. For instance the wind on the flight deck of the U.S.S. Coral Sea might be coming from any direction when we were told to land and except for some rare situation we were expected to land without undue delay. Once on the makeshift helicopter landing pad we were greeted by a friendly group of military men and although our language problems hindered complete understanding we managed well enough to get the helicopter refueled and a flight plan filed. The flight to Rome was much like the earlier flight with low level glimpses of Italian towns and much enthusiastic greetings from the amazed folks we overflew. When we approached the airport near Rome I received instructions from the control tower telling me I was cleared to land on the active runway, just as if I was an airline aircraft. I advised the tower that this wasn’t necessary, that I could make my approach to a taxiway and then air taxi to the parking area. We received excellent post-flight assistance once we had secured the aircraft for the night. Since it was late in the day I decided we would spend the night in Rome. After I had my flight chief and myself quartered for the night I went out for a fine meal and an evening touring the streets of Rome as a first time visitor might well be expected to do. In later years I had several opportunities to visit and study Rome in depth but none stands out as much as this first visit. The next morning I gathered up my crew chief, who professed that he had had a great time the previous night, however, he did so never moving from the hotel bar the whole evening. Our liberty likes and dislikes would always be at odds I would guess. After our drive to the airport where I would file a flight plan to Naples, I met two pilots from the Coral Sea who were ferrying two AD Skyraider aircraft southward. From Naples they were to contact the Coral Sea and arrange to land on board the ship somewhere at sea. Once I had completed arrangements for my flight I took off heading toward Naples. Once I had settled on course I had the sun in my eyes and the sun shone directly on my body. I became so warm that I found myself half dozing off to sleep. It was at this time that one of the Skyraider pilots, who had taken off from the Rome airport some time after I had departed, decided to pull a bit of a trick on me. Unknown to me he approached my helicopter from the rear and at the last moment he dove his aircraft so as to fly under me and once he cleared my helicopter he went into a steep climb just missing my turning rotor blades by a few feet. The loud noise of his engine and the suddenness of his appearance completely unhinged me for a few moments. I might have been in a half state of awareness before the trick was pulled on me, but for the rest of the flight I never so much as blinked one time. As I neared Naples I noted that there were dense clouds ahead which appeared to be thunderstorm clouds. It was obvious to me that I could go no further on my planned route southward to Taranto until the weather improved, so I decided to remain in Naples for the night and I would attempt to cross the mountains early the next morning when I expected the thunderstorms and low clouds would have moved on. After my landing at the Naples Airport, and after securing the helicopter for the night we took a taxi to a hotel where American military personnel were given good rates. My crew chief, not surprisingly, decided he would go out on the town alone. His idea of having a good time did not correspond with what I might want to do. Checking with the local military services recreation facility I found several attractions in the downtown area of Naples that interested me. Finally, after due consideration, I decided I would attend a presentation of he opera Madam Butterfly. At that time in my life I was not enthusiastic about opera, but I was familiar with the arias from Madam Butterfly and I decided that listening to good music after a day in the air listening to my helicopter engine and transmission noises would be a real auditory relief for my ears. As I had hoped the music from the opera was very pleasant. I was reminded that the opera Madam Butterfly was about a love affair that an American naval officer had with a Japanese woman, had been written by an Italian so I was not surprised that some of the audience seemed to anticipate what was going to happen next. The mostly Italian audience that attended the performance that evening was very enthusiastic. During the intermission that followed the first half of the opera I joined the audience who moved to a small anteroom where refreshments were served. Shortly after entering the room I recognized a man whose face was very familiar to me. He was engaged in conversation with some acquaintances so I waited for a moment when it seemed appropriate to introduce myself. As I approached this familiar face I said, “Hello. I am Jim Waldron and I am sure I know you. Are you from New Orleans and have we met there? He looked at me with amusement and said, “I am afraid we have never met. I am Charles Lane and I am frequently seen in the movies. Perhaps that is how you recognize me.” This was so unexpected that I became completely flustered so I quickly excused myself and repaired to a far corner of the room. Recently I looked up Mr. Charles Lane on Google. I was interested to learn that he died in 2007, at the age of 102 years after having appeared in over 150 movies. As in this case he was often recognized, but not as a movie actor but as a person known out of one’s personal experiences. Wikipedia states this about him: You'd know his face in an instant, but probably not his name. In dozens of movies and countless television roles, Charles Lane made his series of brief moments on the screen shine. Following this faux pas of mine I retired to the theater for the remainder of the opera, and following that I returned to my hotel room to rest up for the final leg of my aerial adventure. I received a wake up call early the next morning from the hotel front desk and without further delay my crew chief and I hurried our dressing in order to get ourselves and our helicopter airborne as early as possible. I hadn’t given it much thought ahead of time but I presumed the hotel restaurant would be open when we were dressed and ready for travel. It turned out the restaurant and adjacent kitchen were both closed so there was no chance that we would have breakfast unless there was a restaurant at the airfield. Unfortunately, the airport passenger support facilities were closed when we got to the airfield, so there would be be no breakfast for the two of us that morning. While my crew chief readied the helicopter I went to the Operations Desk and filed a flight plan to fly to the Bari, Italy airport, about two hours away. In looking at my navigational map of the region I noted that there was an Italian military base about halfway between Naples and Bari. I came up with the idea of making an unauthorized landing at this small base, near the town of Foggia and, perhaps get to eat breakfast there. So I started up the helicopter and when ready for my takeoff I called the tower. I did not tell the tower of my plan to land at Foggia since it might lead to misinterpretation due to language difficulties. I recalled that on the previous afternoon the hills directly in front of my flight path were covered with menacing hunderstorm clouds which would have sucked up my tiny helicopter and scattered us in many parts over the Italian landscape. Once I got airborne I noted that the mountains directly ahead of my flight path were free of clouds. This was a great relief for me. Clearing the mountains directly in front of my helicopter was easily done but I couldn’t cross them without some concern for the possibility of having another engine failure. Our squadron had lost several helicopters over the preceding year when engines failed over water. Fortunately the engine that quit on me occurred over land and I was fortunate to have landed without damaging the aircraft. These failures which occurred over water resulted in the aircraft sinking after the crews had evacuated the aircraft. My engine failure took place over land and was the single exception to sinking at sea. As I approached the Italian Army base adjacent to Foggia I was able to see that the soccer field provided the best area for my landing. I presumed that once I had turned off my engine and rotor blades that we would be inundated with on-lookers as happened when landing in areas where helicopters had not been seen before. It came as a real surprise that our only greeter was a single Italian enlisted man who showed up alone in a Jeep. He said that reveille had not been sounded on the base and the rest of the base personnel were still asleep. I told him that when we left Naples it was too early to get breakfast so we hoped that we might get fed at the base in Foggia. The soldier told us that the cooks were still in bed, however, if we went with him to the mess hall we might find something to eat from the refrigerator, So the three of us got in the Jeep and drove away to the mess hall. Unfortunately all the food containers at the mess hall were locked up so it was obvious we were not going to have our hunger satisfied in Foggia. Our soldier greeter was quite concerned that he couldn’t satisfy our needs so he decided to drive us to the Officers Club where we might find something to tide us over until we would land at the airport in Bari. This stop was also unproductive for all the food was locked up as it had been at the mess hall. The soldier was so distraught that he went into the officer’s bar and returned with a gift of two stolen bottles of beer. So my crew chief and I consumed the two bottles of beer to show our appreciation of the good will shown by our lone soldier but it did little to assuage our hunger. After takeoff we headed on our next leg of our Italian journey. Most of this area that we overflew enroute to Bari was field after field of large olive trees, most of which had been surgically trimmed as to produce a maximum of olives to fill the world-wide demand for this delicious fruit. Bari Airport was a very active base with heavy commercial traffic. Our landing was accepted in a most routine fashion so we were refueled moments after we had landed. A full-service restaurant was nearby so my chief and I were finally able to quell that hunger that had pestered us since we had left Naples. After an hour or so on the ground we departed for Taranto in the heel of Italy. The flight was a short 45 minutes in length and I had no difficulty locating the naval base where we were expected to land and remain until our ship, the Coral Sea, was expected to anchor in the harbor. The wait for the U.S.S. Coral Sea was only one day in length and it proved to be a rather dull time for the both of us since Taranto was a very small town with little avenues for entertainment. So when our ship showed up in the harbor we eagerly got permission to take off and flew aboard our home away from home. We were pleased to discover that our absence was sorely felt and that little time was lost in placing us back on the flight schedule.