A Waco's Happy Ending
How an abandoned World War II glider found love in Long Island.
- By Joshua Stoff
- Air & Space magazine, September 2002
Images of the glider in flight (here, a CG-4 prototype) don’t capture the human drama of a CG-4 mission, as the museum’s finished display does.
NASM Neg. #2002-3809
WANTED: Waco CG-4 Troop Glider - any airframe components, any condition...
THUS BEGAN A SMALL ADVERTISEMENT I placed in a January 1987 issue of the tabloid Trade-A-Plane. I had no idea that the advertisement would send me on a journey that would last 15 years.
I was (and still am) the curator of the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City, New York, founded in 1979 to “collect, preserve and interpret the aerospace heritage of Long Island.” That mandate is a bigger job than it might sound like: More than 50 manufacturers have produced air- and spacecraft here continually since 1909. Over the years, we have been able to acquire over 60 craft, nearly all of them local products. But sadly, most of the wide variety of aircraft produced here either no longer exist or are now so rare that we can’t afford to acquire an example.
One of those rare aircraft is the Waco CG-4 troop glider. Early in World War II, the Germans had had success using gliders to land troops in combat zones, so the U.S. Army decided to develop a similar corps for itself. Glider transport had two advantages over parachuting: The soldiers ended up concentrated near a target, rather than spread over the countryside, and the gliders could also be used to transport cargo.
In response to the Army’s decision, the Waco Aircraft Company of Troy, Ohio, probably best known for its open-cockpit biplanes, designed the CG-4 in late 1941.Weighing 2,400 pounds and having an 83-foot wingspan, the glider was ungainly but robust. In addition to two pilots, each CG-4 could transport 13 troops and all of their gear, or a jeep or light artillery.
Though the war planners found the gliders efficient, the men who actually participated in glider missions found the experience arduous. A Douglas C-47 transport towed the glider on a 350-foot nylon rope; a typical tow would last several hours and be flown at about 100 mph and 1,500 feet. Low-altitude turbulence wore out the C-47 pilots and made the troops in the glider airsick. The landing zone had no air traffic control; once over the zone, the glider pilot would release his craft at about 400 feet, in order to minimize the time that the unarmored glider would be vulnerable to enemy gunners on the ground. In addition, when a large number of gliders were released over a relatively small landing zone, they would sometimes crash into one another, or into trees or other objects.
Nonetheless, the gliders achieved some remarkable successes. During the D-Day invasion, 513 gliders were landed in Normandy, France, and only 11 percent of the troops inside were killed or injured during the landings.





Comments (6)
hey GREAT article i was researching for an civil air patrol essay about the CG-4 and this was lots of help... THANKS ALOT!!
Posted by Tyler on July 29,2009 | 08:27 PM
I'm sure proud of you guys restoring a Waco. My uncle William Phillip Preslar of Dallas, Texas was
101st Airborne Glider Batt on D-Day in Normandy.
He survived the war but is gone now. I know he would be
thrilled about your work
Posted by Charles Wallace on March 16,2010 | 07:04 PM
Great job. I just purchased myself parts of a Waco glider that has been left on an airfield in France. I have the cockpit and middle part. I will start also a project to restore it.
The quartermaster museum Belgium
Posted by Peter De Brabander on April 8,2010 | 04:35 PM
I have 2 benches that were used in the WACO glider. I can send you photos if you would like.
Posted by Neal Dawson on December 21,2010 | 07:18 PM
Fantastic story, and one plane I'd love to see as my father was flown into Burma in one.
Posted by John Green on November 15,2011 | 08:33 AM
I can remember flying a glider as a small boy,in Syracuse N.Y. in a friends back yard .they were sold for $25.00 war surplus.People bought them to get the plywood boxes for building materials.So i guess im the youngest living glider pilot.I wonder if any parts survive in upstate N.Y.?
Posted by Keir Helberg on May 2,2013 | 07:44 PM