100 Years of Marine Aviation
A salute to 10 aircraft that carried the few and the proud into history.
- By The Editors
- Air & Space magazine, March 2012
Afterburners aglow, an F/A-18C with the “Death Rattlers” squadron launches from a carrier deck.
U.S. Navy/Photographer's Mate 3rd Class Ryan J. Restvedt
(Page 6 of 8)
Sifuentes’ favorite missions were those that brought a wounded Marine out of harm’s way, and, he says, that goes for any helicopter pilot: Army, Air Force, Navy, or Marine.
F9F Panther: Attack Cat
The fifth in the series of cat-named fighters (Wildcat, Hellcat, etc.) that the Navy bought from Grumman’s Long Island “iron works,” the F9F Panther was also the company’s first production jet and the Navy’s first jet to fly in combat. It served as the Marine Corps’ primary ground attack jet during the Korean War. Designed as a fighter but used almost exclusively by the Navy and Marines as a bomber, the Panther had the same nasty traits of other jets in its generation: It gulped fuel, stalled without warning, and had a high landing speed that made it a handful to put down on a carrier deck. But called in by an Army or Marine division getting pounded by enemy guns, the Panthers, especially those with Marine squadrons based at provisional Korean airfields, could come to the aid of ground forces much faster than their piston-powered forebears. They were also more accurate and less vulnerable to ground fire, though not invulnerable. An F9F piloted by famous Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams, for example, was struck by rifle fire when Williams flew as part of a 35-aircraft strike group in February 1953. Williams managed to get the airplane, on fire and leaking hydraulic fluid, back to base.
In the same squadron, VMF-311, future astronaut and senator John Glenn tangled with a North Korean anti-aircraft gun emplacement but managed to get his F9F back as well. After he landed he found an enormous hole in the Panther’s tail. (Apollo astronaut Neil Armstrong also flew the F9F in Korea, as a Navy pilot.)
Marine Panthers flew every type of combat mission in Korea; in addition to strafing and napalming enemy positions, pilots bombed road and rail networks, airfields, bridges—anything to interrupt North Korean supply lines. They even shooed away the occasional MiG, though that job was better left to the Air Force’s swept-wing F-86 Sabre.
In Vietnam, Marine Panthers were the first jets to be used for airborne forward air control missions.
F-4 Phantom: FastCam
The McDonnell F-4 Phantom began its long association with the Marine Corps in 1959, when Lieutenant Colonel Robert Barbour took a production version of the Phantom for a test flight. In the Vietnam War, prior to 1965, only the Marines consistently flew the aircraft in support of its ground troops. But that mission is not what most people associate with the Phantom. Flying with three services—the Navy, which took delivery first, the Air Force, and Marines—F-4s were MiG killers: During Vietnam, the aircraft downed 164 adversaries, more than any other U.S. fighter.
The unarmed, photoreconnaissance version of the Phantom, the RF-4B was a Marine exclusive. Its lengthened nose accommodated three camera bays, and in the rear of the airplane, a 270-million candlepower photo cartridge worked as a monster flashbulb.
“The RF-4B was a good machine, and it could take a lot of punishment too,” recalled General Jack Dailey in a 2004 oral history recorded at the National Air and Space Museum. Dailey, who is the director of the Museum, had been flying an EF-10B in the “Agony Orbit” each night over Vietnam, watching for surface-to-air missiles, when he was moved up to the RF-4B.
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Comments (21)
How can you not include the A-4 Skyhawk among the top ten USMC aircraft?
Posted by Lee Reavis on January 26,2012 | 03:23 PM
The UH34 was not the last of piston engined choppers. That distinction belongs to the HR2S-1 "The Deuce". How do I know this? I am one of the original plank owners. The squadron designation in January 1957 was HMR(M)-461. With the advent of the CH-53 that was changed to HMH-461. The squadron will celebrate its 55th Anniversary of the commissoning at Quantico during early May of 2012.
Posted by Ed Bowers on January 26,2012 | 05:40 PM
"Between 1941 and 1952, the Chance Vought Corporation hammered out 12,500 handsome fighters with powerful Wright R-2800 radials driving Hamilton Standard propellers." Wright 2800, in a Corsair?
EDITORS' REPLY: It was an error; the correct engine is the Pratt & Whitney R-2800.
Posted by Dale Stoner on January 26,2012 | 07:14 PM
CH-53 Helicopters - conspicuous in their absence from this list. Arguably the most relevant Marine Corps aircraft since the 80s for the US Marine Corps. The critical enabler in many missions of importance to our national prestige and national security strategy. The O'Grady Mission, the raid on Camp Rhino - the longest amphibious raid in history, numerous noncombatant evacuation and humanitarian assistance operations are just a few of the highlights on the resume of the Marines who fix and fly the CH-53 helicopter. Moreover, the high-hot capability of the aircraft will continue to make it the "go to" aircraft for missions at high altitudes in Afghanistan. This is a big miss by the editorial staff!
Posted by Paul Croisetiere on January 27,2012 | 07:07 PM
I can not believe the F-35 ( "carried the few and the proud into history" - ?? ) made this list.
Secondly, I am aghast the A-4 Skyhawk didn't.
Sincerely,
Mike Karwath
VMA-311 Alumni
Posted by Mike Karwath on January 27,2012 | 09:38 PM
How did the SPAD get left out ?
Posted by J. Glick on January 29,2012 | 07:40 PM
Also missed the F8U Crusader??
Posted by DC Jensen, VMF334 on January 30,2012 | 12:03 AM
In the article on Marine Aviation, and specifically the F4U Corsair, the airplane was normally powered by a Pratt & Whitney, not a Wright R-2800.
Posted by Scott Armbruster on January 31,2012 | 11:13 AM
I cannot believe you listed the F-35, which has not served not 1 day in USMC Aviation duty, and you left out the A-4 Skyhawk AND F-8 Crusader. I really hope that the F-35 never sees a Marine Corps airfield. The plane is a sorry excuse for a fighter jet and a BIG waste of money. Go Harriers!
Posted by Jeff Mizell on February 2,2012 | 12:30 AM
A-6 Intruder and EA-6B Prowler? Sacrificed to provide room for the F-35B?? Holy Smokes
Posted by Tj on February 5,2012 | 05:36 PM
You have got to be kidding me-- no A-4 or Ch-53?!
Posted by carl "TANK" Shireman on February 14,2012 | 02:15 PM
I know and Like Lt. Gen. Tom Miller (p30 Feb/Mar Air and Space) but he did not procure the Harrier. After returning from flying Harrier in January 1969, I set out on the usual US Navy budget drill to initiate the buy while in OP 506. Tom was a great advocate and the network of Marines in civvies on the Hill were a big help but the real story is in my just released book, "Bazttlecry One". I'd be happy to send you a copy.
Capt. R.J. Thomas USN (Ret.)
Posted by Captain Robert J. Thoomas USN (Ret.) on February 27,2012 | 04:39 PM
"In Vietnam, Marine Panthers were the first jets to be used for airborne forward air control missions."
Are you sure you want Panthers in Viet Nam? I vote for the F9F-8T Cougar.
Posted by Bruce DeWald on March 1,2012 | 07:58 PM
What about the Herk? Didnt make the list? Only aircraft that will still be flying, at least until 2030, almost 80 yrs, in one branch of service. Come on guys, Nobody would be anywhere without us passing gas.
Cpl. Albert Hall
VMGR-152, -253
Posted by Albert Hall on March 11,2012 | 11:53 AM
Where is the Herk? Someone needs to go back and get a Marine Aviation history lesson.
The Herk is the longest serving aircraft and has flown more flights than any other USMC aircraft ever...Combined.
Posted by Chris Ciccone on March 20,2012 | 10:26 AM
No Herk and No CH-53 series tells that this list is incomplete and poorly thought out.
Signed,
Unhappy Flying Monkey
Semper Malus
Posted by Jesse Canfield on March 20,2012 | 10:41 AM
Another vote for the A-4m Skyhawk. If you couldn't work it in to the top 10 you titled the article wrong.
VMA-223 Bulldogs and A-4s Forever!
Posted by L Stone on March 21,2012 | 08:59 AM
When you see that Smithsonian Air & Space is putting together a list of Marine Air, you immediately think this will be a well-researched article. I'm not sure what these editors are thinking. Did they just walk over to the Pentagon, grab some boot LT and asked him to put together a list for them?
A-6 Intruder: Central aircraft during the Vietnam war, so much so that even Hollywood recognized it. This service of this aircraft allowed Marines to fly over 2000 combat sorties during the Desert Storm.
EA-6B Prowler: What is Marine air without this aircraft's ECMs? Not to mention other US military & international military air missions and the support received from this aircraft.
This is a gross oversight to exclude such an important aircraft. The editors should consider revising this article.
Posted by Thomas Vreeland on March 21,2012 | 10:22 AM
KC-130 missed the list.
Tom Heston
VMGR-152, 6316, 1979-1981
Posted by Tom Heston on March 21,2012 | 01:35 PM
How does a plane that hasn't seen service yet appear on this list? No Skyhawk A4s?
--Alum, VMA-223, 331, 131
Posted by ron gochnour on March 25,2012 | 07:55 PM
How does the KC-130 BattleHerk not make this list? Serving daily since 1960. Some of the same herks that went into Khe Sanh in 68 were hauling troops and trash into Rhino and Kandahar in 2001/2002. Even Gen Mattis remarked that the early success in Afghansitan couldn't have happened without the KC-130. C'mon man!
Posted by Tony V on April 14,2012 | 10:07 PM