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Tue, Dec 06, 2005

Gone West: John Stewart Detlie

Architect Helped Camouflage Boeing Plant During WWII

John Stewart Detlie didn't design, build, or fly aircraft, but he did ensure others could at a time when America needed those planes the most.

Detlie, the architect who designed the effective camouflage used to disguise the Boeing aircraft factory during WWII, passed away last week after battling lung cancer, just a few weeks shy of his 97th birthday. A noted Hollywood set designer, artist and architect, Detlie left a promising career behind the scenes in the movies to work for the Army Corp of Engineers during WWII. 

According to an obituary published by the Associated Press, Detlie left filmmaker Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1942 to oversee the camouflage of Boeing's Seattle aircraft plant, where the B-17 Flying Fortress and later B-29 Superfortress were produced. In an effort to confuse enemy bombers, the 26-acres of Boeing's Plant 2 complex was covered with chicken wire, plywood and canvas structures to make it appear, from the air, to be just another Northwestern town -- including trees, houses, and schools.

As you can see from the picture above, it looked like anything but an aircraft factory when Detlie's work was completed.

Instead of returning to Hollywood after the war -- he had been nominated for an Academy Award in 1940 as production designer on the film "Bitter Sweet" -- Detlie joined the architecture firm that hired him for the Boeing job. He eventually became a partner of that firm, and went on to design Seattle's Children's Orthopedic Hospital as well as several University of Washington buildings, and Temple De Hirsch -- all local landmarks.

After leaving Seattle with his second wife, Virginia, following the death of their 3-year-old son, Detlie went on to become a noted architect in LA, Baltimore and Honolulu.

"He was an amazing man," Virginia Detlie said last Friday. "He accomplished so much."

According to retired newspaperman Lou Guzzo, Detlie was also a pioneer in the Seattle arts movement in the 1950s as a member of the Beer & Culture Society, a small group of academics, architects and artists who later formed Allied Arts of Seattle. He was the group's first president.

Aero-News doesn't know if Detlie ever piloted an airplane, or if he especially wanted to. Nor do we know if he'd ever heard the term "gone west," an acclamation given to pilots and airmen who have left the Earth's firmament and moved on to whatever awaits on the other side. Nonetheless, for his work during wartime we believe John Stewart Detlie has earned the honor, and we are saddened to hear of his loss.

FMI: www.boeing.com

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