The journey on which the world’s most famous fighter airplane Great Britain was holding off Nazi Germany and the United States was rushing warplanes to British airfields. In 1942, Glacier Girl was a brand new Lockheed P-38F, one of hundreds of airplanes sent as part of U.S. Army Air Force had its pilots base-hop across the North Atlantic from Maine to Scotland. Not all squadrons made it across, and this particular one was forced down by weather to an emergency landing on an ice cap in Greenland. For Glacier Girl, that was leg one.
The following story, originally published in the January 1993 issue of Air & Space/ Smithsonian, recounts adventures during the second leg of the journey, a 22-year slog through recovery and restoration that couldn’t have been completed without the ingenuity, stamina, and fortune of a Roy Shoffner, a Kentucky businessman, named the P-38 “Glacier Girl” and began to plan the completion of its mission.
Glacier Girl’s new owner Rod Lewis, a pilot and president of the Lewis Energy Group in San Antonio, Texas, bought the fighter last year and immediately started preparations for the third leg of the journey. Lewis owns seven other warbirds, including Rare Bear, a Grumman F8F Bearcat racer, which set the closed-course world speed record of 528.3 mph in 1989. “I’m interested in preserving the history and heritage,” he says. He was committed to having Glacier Girl complete the mission even though, he acknowledges, “this trip is going to cost some bucks.”
“Besides that,” he continues, “it’s a hell of an adventure. I’ve been drilling oil and gas wells since 1982, so I guess I was looking for the equivalent experience in aviation.” Lewis will fly his Pilatus PC-12 on the journey, while warbird expert Steve Hinton flies Glacier Girl and airshow performer Ed Shipley flies a restored North American P-51. The group flew a scouting expedition earlier this month to locate alternate airfields in case the weather once again forces an unplanned landing. “In that part of the world, weather changes are quick and constant,” Lewis says. “We went by some old World War II airfields that had gravel runways and still had fuel barrels sitting around.” He expects to make six to eight stops a long the way. “You know, it wears you out flying these old airplanes. We can cross 1,000 miles if we need to.”
Glacier Girl will appear at the Oshkosh, Wisconsin the last week of July. And the future? Lewis expects the warbird will make an appearance at a few airshows every year.
Iced Lightning (reprinted from Air & Space magazine, January 1993)
by Karen Jensen
Lieutenant Harry L. Smith had a 23-year-old’s knack for popular expressions and a military pilot’s level head. Before attempting to land his P-38 on a forlorn stretch of the Greenland ice cap, he flew over another pilot’s Lightning, which had just slammed over on its back in the slushy summer snow. Smith was searching hopefully for some sign of life in the upside-down aircraft. "Susie-Q, it’s happened! It’s true!" Smith rhymed in a journal written shortly after the July 15, 1942 crash landing of six P-38s and two B-17s. "The lad is climbing out, he’s waving at me. Old Mac! I pull ’er up in a roll over him, and circle to approach"
Smith throttled back at 200 feet, cut off the fuel, feathered the props, and slid, wheels up, into a snowy landing. Before sprinting off to join his downed buddies, he logged in details of the light and landing, shrugged off his parachute, removed his helmet, and threw the keys to the P-38’s canopy inside the cockpit.


Comments
Hi, I have read the Glazier Girl article in this site as well as the 'Lost Squadron' book. It appears that Carl Rudder was the 'Entertainment' while all the crews were waiting to be rescued. I love in the UK and was wondering if you have anything on the ancestry for Carl Rudder. I would appreciate anything you may have. I know the B17's were stationed around a 1 1/2 hours drive from my home in East Anglia. Kind regards L Rudder
Posted by Les Rudder on September 24,2008 | 01:06PM
Has Glacier Girl been fitted with the dive brakes that were part of the later series of P-38's ? How do you ensure that you don't encounter the engine detonation problems that seemed to have plagued the earler P-38's with in tubro intecoolers in the leading edge of the wings ?? What octane fuel do you have to use and how expensive is it per gallon ?
Posted by Frank Sobol on November 9,2008 | 09:59AM
Just a thought. With the ice caps currently melting at an unprecendented rate how long will it be before a team is up there to retrieve the remaining birds?
Posted by Tom Patterson on August 20,2009 | 02:35PM
The rate of melt off per year as stated by environmentalists say there is a four to ten feet per year melting up in the area the other planes are located. The rest of missing aircraft should be on top of the ice now. From what I have been told and read about the area from other people who are not involved with trying to convince there is global warming the planes are still getting deeper every year by a foot or so with the annual precipitation. You have a great question. I wonder who is telling the truth. I wish I could afford to go up and measure it my self because when I first read the story of people thinking about going and getting the airplanes fifteen years ago no one had a clue how deep they were. What a terrific story that expedition made over the years. It seems like someone would go and grab the rest of the planes since they are worth so much now-a-days. They know how to do it now. Somewhere I read the are over 320 feet deep. I wonder what the condition of the other P-38s were. Oh well, we may never know.
Posted by Badmoon on September 24,2009 | 01:05AM
First of all I want to excuse my english, it's not as good as I wish - but I hope you understand it. I'm a Dane who is interested in crytolog. In my study of some episodes from the 2nd world war, I've read that some American airplanes were 'misinformed' by the Germans. They have broken the American codes, and send a message via Hagelin(?) to the airplanes to go north. At last the planes had no more fuel, and had to land on the icecap in Greenland. Is Glacier Girl one of those planes? - or did the crew land only because of the weather? Greetings, Jesper Frandsen
Posted by Jesper Frandsen on October 1,2009 | 03:24AM