A Pearl Harbor Mystery
How a 1940s Interstate Cadet trainer sent a famous airshow pilot on a journey to find a kindred spirit.
- By John Fleischman
- Air & Space magazine, January 2012
When Japanese aircraft began their assault (Nakajima B5N Kate bomber, lower right), Cornelia Fort was giving a flying lesson; she later documented the terrifying surprise in her logbook.
National Museum of the USAF; Texas Woman's University Libraries; Library of Congress; Photo Illustration by Theo
(Page 6 of 6)
Pietsch got the government records for N37345. There is no evidence that connects this Cadet with Hawaii, he says. Interstate had manufactured it and certified it airworthy on October 14, 1941, and sold it three days later to Judd Goodrich of North Hollywood, California, who was officially registered as the new owner on December 27, 1941. If Fort had flown it on December 7, someone would have had to crate it up and ship it back to Los Angeles immediately afterward. But in the days after the Pearl Harbor attack, getting out of Hawaii, for civilians and civilian airplanes, was next to impossible. Fort herself, even with family connections, couldn’t get back for nearly three months. The only other explanation is that Goodrich bought the Cadet at the end of 1941 but didn’t take possession of it until later.
The next reference in government records is a modification approval Goodrich got for installing two new antennas on September 19, 1942, in Tucson, Arizona. Two months later, on November 21, Goodrich sold N37345 to PT Air Service of Hayes, Kansas, where it began a short, unlucky life. From the repair certifications, Pietsch figures N37345 crashed in 1944 and again in 1955. Its registration lapsed soon after.
Why does it matter if this Interstate Cadet is the one that Fort flew over Pearl Harbor 70 years ago, and if the other was a sister ship that survived on the ground? Time thins out human witnesses, and to fully appreciate great events, we need historic objects. The horse that General Phil Sheridan rode to the 1864 Battle of Winchester stands stuffed in the Smithsonian; to look upon that genuine warhorse is to catch a whiff of Civil War gunsmoke. Anything else would be just a stuffed horse.
In this case, though, perhaps the artifact is less important, and the mystery can go unsolved. Fort was a talented writer who captured both the prosaic and poetic sides of flying in the early 1940s. Six weeks after surviving the horrors of Pearl Harbor, she wrote a strange, eerily past-tense letter home to her mother: “I dearly loved the airports, little and big. I loved the sky and the airplanes, and yet, best of all I loved the flying.” At the end, she wrote, “I was happiest in the sky ⎯at dawn when the quietness of the air was like a caress, when the noon sun beat down, and at dusk when the sky was drenched with the fading light.” Fort’s storytelling is powerful enough to carry us back to a different flying world before December 7, 1941, and to the new and crueler world just after.
John Fleischman is a frequent contributor.
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Comments (6)
What a woman. Very inspiring. Great article:).
Posted by Paul Lewis on December 6,2011 | 02:37 AM
Was that woman called "Ma Woods?" Had a Flight School in Honolulu. EDITORS' REPLY: No; you might be thinking of one of the other civilians flying over Honolulu that day.
Posted by Denny craig on January 3,2012 | 02:36 PM
my father owned a cadet from 1951 til 1964.
Posted by thomas on January 18,2012 | 11:10 PM
My father bought N37266 in 1972 For $1500 I and my brother learned to fly in it. It was a great AC.
My father is the one that put the plexiglass door in to get better view see the field approved 337.
I knew it was flying during the pearl harbor attack they landed in a field close to Kaneohe Marine base which no longer exixt they did not even tie the aircraft down. It was not Margarite Woods she was flying another aircraft.
I kew her well during the 1972 fuel crunch she told us "Sonny I like your airplanes and that she would sell us fuel" any time she liked our airplane we had a Interstate Cadet and a Stinson 108.Unfortunately she passed away in the 80
If you want pictures when it was in Hawaii let me know.
Thanks
Pierre
spotthedog [at] att [dot] net
Posted by Pierre Michel on March 26,2012 | 10:32 PM
From reading the article, it seems that could be some confusion about the "N" numbers of these two aircraft.
Is it possible that she was flying "N37266", but thought it was "N37345" ? Such as, could the "N" numbers have been confused somehow ? What did she have available to have put
N37345 in her log book ? The article says that the SN of
"N37345" is 188. What was the SN of "N37266" ?
Has there been any explanation since January ?
Jim Warwick
Posted by Jim Warwick on May 14,2012 | 05:22 PM
Glad that my package to the Texas Womens University, of xeroxes from the FORT family documents, including the logbook, helped with the "N" number of Cornelia's CADET. That log simply says, "12-7 Cadet 37345 Cont 65..." The late George L Mothershed and I corresponded and he knew of the above. Alex Dorstling, the next owner of "Cadet N37266, serial 109" was also curious and asked me, yet may perhaps not passed on the difference between the two CADET airframes to the next owner.
You may read more of Cornelia Clark FORT's day within HIRANO's ZERO; AVIATION HISTORY, Jan 2009. PO1c Hirano later crashed his ZERO AI-154 at Fort Kamehameha within 15 minutes of his unit's attack on John Rogers Fielhd. A bit more about "Corny" (her school nickname) is mentioned in GHOSTS OF PEARL HARBOR; FLIGHT JOURNAL, June 2007...which is the combat history of George Welch, Ken Taylor, and John Dains.
I have tracked her morning's student to the Wisconsin/Nebraska area. Still on that search...sigh.
Cheers,
David Aiken, a Director: Pearl Harbor History Associates, Inc.
Posted by David Aiken on May 17,2012 | 05:27 PM