Stranded
Four aircraft, 12 airmen, 25 days, 40 below zero, in the middle of nowhere.
- By Edward Farmer
- Air & Space magazine, September 2011
When seven men got stuck in a grim patch of Greenland in 1948, the Air Force sent a B-17 to rescue them, but it got mired in soft snow (top of montage), only worsening the predicament.
USAF
ON DECEMBER 7, 1948, an unusual aviation drama began to unfold. A U.S. Air Force C-47 transport on a routine flight across Greenland got caught in a whiteout and ended up flying into the snow-covered terrain. The pilot sustained head injuries, but all seven men on board survived.
The aircraft went down in southern Greenland, about 125 miles north of its destination, the Air Force base Bluie West One (BW-1). Three days later, an Air Force B-17 attempted a rescue of the downed airmen. But the bomber landed in soft snow and began sinking. Now another aircraft and two more airmen were stranded on the ice cap.
Eventually, a total of 12 airmen ended up in Greenland without an aircraft to get them out. The Air Force turned to the world’s premier arctic rescue organization, the 10th Air Rescue Squadron. The 10th was commanded by the legendary Bernt Balchen, the first airman to fly over both of Earth’s poles and the era’s greatest contributor to arctic search and rescue. My uncle, Murl Chamberlain, a glider pilot with the 10th, was called on to help with the crisis.
When it was over, Murl wrote a longhand account of it that I eventually inherited, along with photographs of the aircraft and people who had been stranded. This article is based in large part on his memoir.
In the 1940s, militaries were starting to use gliders for rescues. Gliders, such as those made by Waco, had been used in World War II for troop insertion and removal. Because they had no engines, they were essentially empty containers that could be filled with people needing to be transported, then picked up via a tow rope by a powered aircraft and hauled up and out. Germans used gliders in 1943 to remove troops from the Kuban peninsula in Russia, and in 1945, Allied gliders evacuated wounded troops from Remagen, Germany. Equipped with either wheels or skis, gliders could be adapted to a wide range of terrain.
My uncle Murl flew the CG-15A, an improved version of the CG-4 troop-carrier gliders made famous in the Normandy D-Day invasion and Operation Market Garden in Holland. The CG-15A could carry 15 soldiers or a light vehicle.
At the time of the Greenland crash, Murl and a few other airmen were at Warner Robins Air Force Base in Georgia, preparing to ferry a glider and its related equipment to Ladd Air Force Base in Fairbanks, Alaska. While they were on the runway, waiting for takeoff clearance, the group received a call from the Pentagon: “We were being diverted to Greenland in order to rescue a downed C-47 on the Greenland Ice Cap,” Murl writes. “[I]n a matter of minutes we were rolling down the runway heading for Westover AFB, Mass.
“Naturally, being a Lieutenant and having the shortest date of rank, I had the honor of flying the glider. I wanted to fly the C-54 [towplane] like the rest of the pilots, but in order to get flying time, the glider was my best bet.”
In the meantime, Air Force aircraft flew over the site, parachuting supplies and portable stoves to the stranded men.
On the first leg of the flight, recounts Murl, “I was the only pilot in the glider…. I had a companion though but he had had no experience in gliders or any type of flying…. All I can remember about him was that he had two stripes on his sleeve and he was very polite. He appeared to be enjoying the ride.…”
At Westover, “we received word about the Troop Carrier Command sending another glider, and that we would all arrive together at Goose Bay, Labrador [Canada], coordinating our activities. The weather was beginning to play an important factor and it looked like we would have problems being able to stay VFR [Visual Flight Rules].
“We left Westover…. The C-54 had a tendency to keep the glider at top redline on the airspeed indicator, and I was constantly pleading to slow down or we might end up losing the glider. As we progressed on our way towards Canada, the weather continued to deteriorate. We were now flying over an overcast and the holes in the clouds were fast disappearing. Night arrived with solid overcast below. At this time I was wondering what kind of weather we had at our destination. The report from the C-54 was that our destination [Seven Islands, in Quebec] had at least 2000 feet and 3 miles or more visibility. I believe we had a small discussion about continuing the flight and all agreed to proceed. I thought about cutting loose when we arrived over the radio beacon at our destination and then about an instrument approach in the glider. One small item was missing. The glider did not have any approach charts. I started asking questions: where the field was located from beacon, what type of obstructions and what the terrain was like? Were there such things as mountains or hills that could get in the way? What are the minimums?…





Comments (6)
Absolutely an amazing story.
Necessity is the Mother of Invention.
Wow!
Posted by Scott Haendel on August 25,2011 | 11:16 AM
I read the article in the September 2022 Air and Space Magazine Stranded.
Has anyone ever thought about salvaging the planes left behind?
I assume that they should be in pretty good condition?
Was the C-54 an Air Force Plane. I was in the air squadron that went to the Antarctic and it had C-54 aircraft with the same orange tail and wing tips.
Have a good day.
Thank you
Tony V. Brown
PNC(SW), USN
Retired
Posted by Tony V. Brown on August 30,2011 | 10:36 PM
The C-54 in the picture was from USAF's 10th Air Rescue at Ladd AFB near Fairbanks Alaska. They were in Georgia picking up a glider to ferry to Alaska when called for the Greenland mission.
Both the C-47 and B-17 had minor damage resulting from their landings but have been "there" over 60 years. Finding them and getting them out would be quite an adventure! Both gliders were substantially damaged during pick-up attempts, and from subsequent wind storms.
These guys showed grit and skill beyond imagination. I'm so blessed to have known one of them.
Ed Farmer
Author. EDITORS' NOTE: Thanks for the additional information, Ed.
Posted by Ed Farmer on September 2,2011 | 02:08 PM
I just read the account of the rescue in Air&Space. As I read through the article, and came upon the photo of Murl Chamberlin, I realized that this was the same Murl Chamberlin that was my first helicopter instructor in Las Vegas during 1964.
Murl was a quite, humble man that never spoke with me of his military background. The only occasion that I remember him referencing the military, was one time he mentioned that during the Korean War they sometimes attached 3.5 rocket launchers to the skids of the Bell 47's they were flying, and if an opportunity came up they could point the helicopter in the direction they wanted to fire.
He was a pleasure to have as an instructor. One of the best pilots that I ever flew with. I only wish that I could have gotten to know him better.
Thank you for the article, and even more to know that Murl had a long life.
Jim Adams
Posted by James Adams on October 19,2011 | 05:31 PM
As a glider pilot flying only under good VFR conditions, I have occasionally had to land out when ambition exceeded lift. It's generally a non-event consisting of dropping in at an airfield other than the one I started from. Still, some adrenalin flows since gliders can't go 'round for another try. It's hard to imagine the courage and skill required by these rescue pilots under the worst possible circumstances. As they said of the Normandy invasion glider pilots, "The G is for guts." Hats off! Thanks for the story.
Dave Glosser, Priv. Pilot Glider
Yardley, PA
Posted by David S Glosser on November 27,2011 | 10:10 PM
Lt.Col. Calvin Jackson was my grandfather.
I remember all these stories that he used to tell me when I lived with him. And I also remember these photographs and many others like them from other arctic rescue missions lining the walls of his basement study (which we lovingly referred to as 'the cockpit'. He always spoke about Murl Chamberlain with such a high respect. What a treat to read this account from your uncle's perspective. And to know that the others involved treasured the experiences there just as much as he did.
Thank you for sharing. I would be interested to know if you have any other photos of Calvin in your family archives, I would love to arrange them for his wife, Mary.
EDITORS' REPLY: We'll pass your comment on directly to the author. Thank you for writing.
Posted by Brian Richardson on April 20,2012 | 02:20 PM