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
(Page 3 of 5)
Valley Forge’s first tour ended on January 19, 1952. Despite challenging winter conditions, ATG-1’s 129 airmen and 79 aircraft, which included Douglas A-1 Skyraiders and swift but short-legged jet-powered Grumman F9F Panthers, as well as Corsairs, had racked up more than 1,000 combat sorties. Ten airmen had been killed or were missing.
ATG-1 returned to duty on February 1, but this second tour was shorter—just 20 days—and on two of them, foul weather shut down flight operations. There were fewer than 500 combat sorties, but the 70 flown on February 8 were especially grueling. Many were Rescue Combat Air Patrol (RESCAP) flights in support of efforts to extract two VF-194 pilots, downed behind enemy lines. That squadron flew Skyraiders, single-seat, propeller-driven attack aircraft that first flew in 1945.
Both rescues failed and two rescue helicopters crashed, one at each site. To make matters worse, a Corsair pilot from an ATG-1 night-flying detachment was killed, while five other RESCAP aircraft suffered crippling flak damage. VF-653’s Ray Edinger flew one of the damaged Corsairs, which had lost hydraulics and was dangerously low on fuel. When his Corsair touched down on Valley Forge, its wheel struts collapsed. Then, as the airplane skidded along the deck, a hung rocket on the port wing was jettisoned and tumbled forward. Flight deck crews raced for cover, but the rocket didn’t explode. Edinger managed to climb from the cockpit, shaken but unhurt.
Sanko, who had flown one of the RESCAP sorties, described it in a letter the next day. His flight had strafed and bombed a hill to keep North Korean troops from reaching the rescue site. Flying low, he’d destroyed a hidden anti-aircraft gun. His airplane, he wrote, “just quivered as near misses went by. I didn’t care, as we wanted so hard to give those poor guys on the ground some help.”
Novelist James Michener, who was then embedded with Task Force 77, described the day’s events in a newspaper dispatch titled “An Epic in Failure.” Michener had been impressed with the pilots’ perseverance. In an article in the July 1952 issue of Reader’s Digest, he recounted that the pilots had told him, “We don’t desert our men.” The experience inspired the fictional drama of downed aircraft and helicopter pilots that concludes Michener’s 1953 novel The Bridges at Toko-Ri.
***
The third combat tour for Valley Forge began on March 3. Better weather and a determination to take out North Korea’s railroad lines before the start of the monsoon season made the workload heavier. Sanko’s March 7 letter to his brother revealed that he’d flown three hops that day, getting “four [rail cuts] and four ox carts and again a small hole in the cowling of my plane….” With a new baby on the way, he was anxious “to see the next couple months scurry by.”
The North Koreans were matching the attackers’ pace. “Seems like the guns are increasing ever more in number and accuracy,” Sanko wrote in mid-March. “Every day the planes come back with battle scars…. Just can’t seem to be able to get a month without a loss.”
Aircraft records confirm his perception: Damage reports from enemy anti-aircraft fire were up 50 percent from ATG-1’s first tour. Because VF-653 had sustained the most pilot casualties in the group, Sanko wondered if “perhaps we are being too aggressive…. I’ve been trying to tell our skipper he was born with a horseshoe in his pocket. He’s as careless as they come at times.”
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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