The Magical History Tour
Why are so many Golden Age airplanes traveling the country together this fall?
- By Mary Collins
- Air & Space magazine, September 2003
By 1927, airplanes were a national craze. At the original tour’s stop in Boston, crowds gathered for a closer look at the Ford 4-AT Tri-motor.
NASM (SI Neg. #93-16120)
GREG HERRICK, A COLLECTOR OF AIRPLANES FROM THE PERIOD BETWEEN THE TWO WORLD WARS, HAS A STORY TO TELL. He puts his beer down, raises his hands like paws, and growls like the junkyard dog he found guarding an airplane stashed on a ranch in Caldwell, Idaho.
“The dog jumped up against the car door,” he says. “There was no way I was getting out of that car. So I tossed him a peanut butter cracker. He sniffed it, then gobbled it up. I got out of the car real slowly and said, ‘Sit!’ When the dog sat, I gave him some more crackers. I was all set.”
After several years of phone calls and casual visits, Herrick had thought this time he might be able to convince the elderly cropduster and ranch owner, Gene Frank, to give up the beat-up jewel lying in the grass behind the wire fence, the “No Trespassing” signs, and the dog: the oldest Ford Tri-motor in existence.
But when Frank pulled up in his truck and saw his guard dog sitting down on the job, he reached for his shotgun.
“That damn dog!” he exclaimed.
“I shouted at him to stop,” Herrick says. “I told him I’d won the dog over with crackers.”
Maybe Frank decided to take the dog’s placid reaction to Herrick as a good sign: After years of trying, Herrick finally got the Tri-motor. The rancher eventually sold him several airplanes, including a 1929 Keystone-Loening Commuter K-84 and a Cunningham-Hall PT-6F. “Even though he thinks of me as a son, he wept when he sold them to me,” Herrick says.
He understands why Frank was so attached to the airplanes; collectors sometimes see a value in objects others miss. For Herrick, the airplanes represent an era in aviation history of unbounded energy and optimism. In the 1920s and ’30s as many as 180 companies churned out airplanes. But many of the models introduced during that period are gone. The Keystone-Loening K-84, for example, is the last of its type. It is one of the trademark biplane flying boats of Grover Loening, who designed the first short-hulled flying boat while working for the Wright brothers. When Loening opened his own company, he competed for Navy contracts (Leroy Grumman was one of his employees), but also built civil craft. Herrick’s K-84 spent its heyday working for small Alaskan airlines before winding up in Gene Frank’s field in 1954.
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Comments (2)
Greg Herrick, Addison Pemberton, Larry Tobin, their families and too many good friends to list are doing more for aviation history than any other group in history. They work quietly, spending money and time, until the day another rare airplane rolls out into the sunshine and the blue smoke from an engine-start puffs into the sky. Two generations of young men and women get a chance to see these aircraft fly again, and hear the rare engine bark. Yes, they take all the chances of an accident with terrible loss, but what they give us is priceless, and I thank them for it.
Posted by Bette Bach Fineman on September 12,2008 | 02:11 PM
I'd like to note that the Dick Blythe referred to in this article was not a reporter, he was an aviator and publicist. Richard Reginald Blythe was a Canadian WWI veteran aviator. In WWI he served in the Royal Flying Corps, the precursor of the RAF. Post-war he was a founding member of the Quiet Birdmen and ran a public relations firm in NYC with fellow Royal Flying Service veteran, Harry S. Bruno, an American volunteer. The firm represented the Wright Aeronautical Company and Charles Lindbergh before and after his historic Trans-Atlantic crossing.
It has been written that he bought the sandwiches Lindbergh brought with him as provisions for his crossing. He was dispatched to Europe by WAC to accompany Lindbergh home on the USS Memphis. It has been said he counselled Lindbergh to wear a business suit and not a uniform to his ceremony so as to appear an every-man that all Americans can relate to.
During the Second World War, he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force and once again served his nation. He was a flight instructor under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan, assigned to No.6 Service Training Flying School in Dunville, Ontario training pilots from across the British Commonwealth.
On May 1st, 1941 he was killed in an accident. His North American T-6 Texan/Harvard trainer suffered an in-flight engine fire forcing him to attempt to bail out. He did not survive. He laid down his life in the service of his nation and for the love flight.
RIP Sgt. Richard Reginald Blythe
Feb 8, 1898 - May 1, 1941
Lest We Forget
Posted by Jon Blythe on March 2,2012 | 06:23 AM