The Ordeal of VF-653
From a Navy Reserve pilot’s letters home, a picture of the darkest days of the Korean War
- By David Sears
- Air & Space magazine, January 2013
The squadron pilots pose on Valley Forge in July 1952, with 13 flight helmets for their fallen colleagues. Among the survivors are Cleland (back row, middle), Edinger (to his immediate left), and Balser (to Cleland’s right).
US Navy
On his way to fight in the Korean War, Navy Reserve Lieutenant Joe Sanko confessed his fear to his older brother: “To date we haven’t lost a single life,” he wrote, “[but] we are going to lose some and perhaps quite a few.” Sanko’s letter, written on November 23, 1951, anticipated the arrival of the aircraft carrier Valley Forge in the Sea of Japan to join Task Force 77, the main striking force of the U.S. Seventh Fleet.
The pilots had been briefed; they knew what awaited them. They would be spending a lot of time over enemy targets, and to destroy them they would have to fly low. By the end of the war, the carriers of Task Force 77, lying 125 miles from the coast of North Korea, would launch more than 255,000 sorties against the communist forces.
Sanko, who had fought in the Pacific in World War II, wrote his brother that his chances of being shot down would be “much greater than in the war with Japan.” Surviving a hit would be much harder. If aviators ditched at sea, Sanko explained, they would be in waters where “temp gets so low that a pilot can survive only five to eight minutes without a submersion suit.” He added: “I’ve got a real fight on my hands this winter.”
Sanko was just days shy of turning 30. He was an F4U Corsair pilot with VF-653, a Naval Air Reserve squadron from Akron, Ohio. His letters home—to his wife Millie, who was expecting their second child, and to his sisters and brothers—were collected and shared with me by his son Dan, who was three years old when his dad left for the war. One of 10 children in a tight-knit Polish-American family, Joe Sanko wrote mainly to reassure his wife and siblings about his safety. But his letters to his older brother Peter were more candid. Peter was a Jesuit, working as a cook at the St. Andrew-on-Hudson seminary (now the Culinary Institute of America) in Hyde Park, New York, and seemed to have the most in common with Joe. Each was far from home and bound emotionally to a new family: a group of men who depended on one another, in one case, for spiritual sustenance; in the other, for their lives.
VF-653 was part of a temporary carrier air group cobbled together with reservists and active-duty squadrons. Air Task Group One was a product of the Korean emergency, formed by sidestepping the need for separate Congressional authorization to commission new air groups.
Sanko was typical of the squadron’s aviators. Many were fathers and senior lieutenants with at least some World War II flight experience. Nearly all lived in Ohio or western Pennsylvania. A few were still in school on the GI Bill, but most were white- or blue-collar workers. VF-653’s 34-year-old executive officer, Ray Edinger, for example, was a General Motors service representative. Bob Balser, 26, one of the squadron’s few bachelors, was an illustrator for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Sanko was a coal miner whose occasional weekend aloft contrasted with long weekday shifts below ground. For each of these “weekend warriors”—like so many of today’s National Guard—the call to duty brought business and family routines to an abrupt halt.
In North Korea, the reservists would become bridge, road, and rail busters. Because that country lacked an industrial base, most of its supplies were hauled overland from Manchuria and the Soviet Union. Task Force 77 aviators specialized in the arduous, dangerous mission of destroying shipments and supply lines that coursed through the North’s rugged terrain. Day after day, they attacked railroads, roads, bridges, and the locomotives, trucks, and even ox carts moving along them.
The Korean War stretched the already thin ranks of America’s post-World War II armed forces. Within days of North Korea’s June 25, 1950 invasion of South Korea, Congress authorized the mobilization of reservists, and President Harry Truman immediately called up 25,000; before the year’s end, 135,000 more were tapped.
Fearful that Korea might be just the first step toward a global conflict, Pentagon brass kept organized units like VF-653 intact for Stateside training. But the delay in deployment was not just strategic. The Navy’s stock of fleet aircraft carriers had dwindled from a VJ Day total of 28 to just 11. Aircraft inventory had been cut too, from about 30,000 to less than 10,000. The consequences were predictable: delays in getting flight equipment and training; the use of World War II-era ships and aircraft pulled from mothballs; extended deployments for under-manned and under-maintained carriers; and reliance on the skills of an aging corps of carrier “prop jocks.”





Comments (6)
I was stationed at NAS Miami, 1949 to 1953. All our Corsairs, Hellcats, TBM's had the letter 'H' on the tail. The two Corsairs in the picture over the Valley Forge also have the letter 'H' on thier tails. I thought the letter designated the Base or Carrier they were stationed?
Gene Lanham
Posted by Gene Lanham on December 22,2012 | 03:26 PM
The letter "H" on the tail designates the squadron. I was in VC-4 (composite squadron 4)from Feb 1953 to August 1955 and our tail designation was "NA". We had F-4 Corsairs, F3H Banshees, F3D Skyknights and a couple of F-9's. We were the only squadron to lose an F3D in Korea. We were stationed in near Atlantic City NJ and since we were such a large squadron we sent detachments of a few planes TAD on carriers. We were a night fighter squadron so all planes including the F-4's had radar. Note that in the first picture on the carrier the F-4 in the forground with "NP" has a radar dome while the "H" designations do not.
Dick Emmons
Posted by Dick Emmons on January 2,2013 | 01:32 PM
Very nice article!
I was fortunate to meet Cook Cleland and his family at the "Gathering of Corsairs and Heroes" in September 2002 at Indianapolis. Also in attendance was F4U-4 (Bu#97143) "Korean War Hero", owned and flown by Joe Tobul. That particular F4U-4 saw action with VF-653, flown at times by Cook Cleland in combat. Sadly, Korean War Hero was heavily damaged and Joe Tobul killed in a crash that November. It has since been rebuilt and is being flown by his son. http://www.koreanwarhero.com/
At the "Gathering" Cook told the story about getting the skipper of the carrier very angry with him. It seems the Corsairs were really worn out. He lost power on take-off once and jettisoned his ordinance directly in front of the ship. Fortunately, when it detonated it didn't do any damage.
Posted by Mike Bealmear on January 11,2013 | 02:11 PM
I enjoyed the article! Nice job!
Posted by Chris Malone on January 19,2013 | 04:58 PM
Being a fan of WW2 era planes like the F4U Corsair that went on to play a huge role in the Korean War since I was a kid, I enjoyed this article (and love the magazine in general) immensely. It gives yet another insight into the "Forgotten War."
Posted by Brian Jopek on January 27,2013 | 08:46 PM
Len DeFranco is my father and I couldn't be any prouder of his service on the Valley Forge with the 653.
Check out Korean War Hero and Jim Tobul
Posted by lisa johnson on March 11,2013 | 11:16 AM