Part Two In A Series
By ANN Correspondent Tom Griffith
As a member of the
press, I get to do things that many people do not get to do.
Most involve getting into airshows and museums without paying for
it (or having my company pay for it). Other times, I get to
go "behind the ropes" at air museums and airshows and climb into
and onto aircraft. Regular visitors have to keep their
distance from, or keep their hands off of, rare, priceless aircraft
and other such artifacts. I've climbed into such classic
craft as the F4U Corsair, P-63 Kingcobra, B-17 Flying Fortress,
PB4Y-2 Privateer and TWO B-25 Mitchells, to name a few of my
favorite aircraft.
There is another aspect to the aviation scene: the
everyday people who come to airshows and museums, and to a certain
extent, the men and women who fly or are otherwise associated with
such aircraft. At the Tulsa, OK stop of the 2003 National Air
Tour (NAT) perhaps a thousand people showed up to witness a little
piece of history that the NAT represents. As I write this
article, the Tour is just beyond the midway point of the
tour. No doubt, people all over these United States are
turning out to see the aircraft and the people that make up the
NAT. The differences are mostly those of accent (I discovered
that people in Oklahoma sound quite different from we Texans to the
south) and maybe how much clothing they had to wear to the
airport.
This past Sunday, the weather in Tulsa was
glorious. It was perhaps in the high 70s to low 80s during
the three or so hours that the NAT planes were at the
airport. The sun was shining bright and there were only
occasional high clouds. This was not an "airshow" in the true
sense of the word. There was almost nothing for sale to eat,
there were no Thunderbirds or Blue Angels to perform and the only
souvenirs for sale were a NAT 2003 teeshirt and related
items. There were no WWII warbirds performing reenactments of
WWII action. There were no Pitts or Extras performing amazing
aerobatics. I had made contact with Suzanne Fedoruk, my
contact person with the tour - she called me on my cell phone just
as I arrived at the Tulsa Air and Space Museum area on foot from
the Tulsa terminal. She had left my name with the guys at the
gate who were keeping the eager crowd out of the hangar and ramp
area, because some of the Tour planes were still taxiing up and
refueling was taking place. He walked with me for a
ways, till Suzanne appeared.
I naturally had my ANN shirt on and my ANN Press Pass was
hanging from my neck. She presented me with a press packet and my
official Air Tour Press Pass. I was set for the day!
She also told me which plane I was scheduled to ride in that
afternoon. I was going to ride in the Stinson Trimotor!
Be still my heart! This very plane was on the cover of -Air and
Space magazine for September. I had this issue in the canvas
bag that held everything for my trip. I had used the article
"The Magical History Tour" by Mary Collins, to help develop my
first article on the Air Tour, and had drooled at the cover
shot. This rare plane is gorgeous, and it was going to be
MINE for a few hours of the tour (well, I'd get to ride in it if I
behaved!). I called my wife, Louise, and told her what plane
I was going to ride in and she shared my excitement.

The planes in the NAT had flown into the Tulsa International
Airport just about the same time that my commercial flight landed
-through my window on the right side of the Southwest Boeing 737
that had brought me to Tulsa, I saw a gaggle of biplanes coming in
to land. They were using one of the shorter runways at
TUL. The Tour planes had arrived in small groups and nearly
all were on the ramp when I finally got to the display area, with
one noted exception: a Stinson Trimotor arrived probably an hour
later, bringing up the rear all by itself. It had experienced
magneto problems in Wichita, Kansas - the mags got wet from a rain
storm and had to be attacked with blow dryers to dry them
off. OH NO! Thank God, the blow dryers worked, and the
dark blue Stinson finally arrived, much to my enjoyment and
relief. The pilot made a perfect landing and when my 35 mm
film comes back from processing, I should have a number of great
shots (keep your fingers crossed!) of this rare bird coming in for
my date with destiny. The plane taxied onto the ramp area and
was directed to its parking place on the back row.
When time came for the tour to continue on to Ft. Worth, TX (my
home) which was the next stop in the 4,000 mile tour, the classic
aircraft (along with four modern support planes) took off in small
groups of three to maybe six or seven ships. They did not
form up and fly by or anything like that. It wasn't in the
schedule and no one expected it.
None-the-less, the people who showed up were greatly pleased
with this collection. I get to go to air museums and airshows
a number of times a year. I've been to the Smithsonian Air
and Space Museum, and their Garber Facility before it was closed to
the public. To say that I was "pleased" would be an
understatement. I was in awe! To think that not only
one or two or even ten, but about 25 classic flying aircraft were
all I this one place at this one time. AND, they all flew
there and would be flying out - just the way the Air Tours of the
1920s and 1930s had done.
The people that I encountered once the crowd was allowed to come
into the ramp area were from all walks of life. There were
families with teenagers down to newborn babies. There were a
number of people who probably were around when the original Tours
happened. There were a number of seasoned citizens in
wheelchairs. They all came to see the Golden Age aircraft and
their pilots.
I spoke with some of the people in the crowd. I had my ANN
Press Pass and the NAT Press Pass dangling around my neck, and I
could have "interviewed" some of them as a correspondent is
supposed to (what do I know, I'm a pharmacist!). Instead, I
mostly just watched and listened. By every aircraft, there
were men (I say "men" because we think that we know EVERYTHING
about everything mechanical and we explain such esoteric
things as NACA cowling, radial vs. inline engines, fabric covering,
bungee cord, ailerons and all that stuff) pointing out details of
the aircraft to their wives, kids, friends, etc. Forget that
maybe their stories were all wrong - who cares - I saw families and
friends having a good time on beautiful morning in the middle of
America.
I had my longest conversation with a crowd member as I sat down
to have a little snack and cool off in the shade of a hangar next
to the display area. A gentleman who I first estimated to be
sixty-something came over and sat down by me. We greeted each
other, but we did not exchange names - it wasn't necessary, nor was
it important. He looked like a "Pete," so I'll call him that.
Pete told me that he had been an aircraft "mechanic" for many
years, and in fact, he'd taught A&P classes in a vocational
college for 27 years "back in Stillwater (OK). He then told
me that he was already flying when WWII started. I was
floored (forget that I was already sitting down) - he had to be
eighty or so, but he didn't look that old!
He said that when WWII started, he naturally joined the US Army
Air Forces as a pilot trainee and went to flight school in Dallas,
TX. He said that after accumulating a "couple hundred" hours
in basic trainers, he was ready to advance to the AT-6 Texan and
the military did what it is famous for: the USAAF decided
that they had enough pilots but didn't have enough parachute
riggers, so he was sent to parachute school! He told me that
his graduation exercise was to make a parachute jump over
Lakehurst, NJ. I said, "you mean, where the Hindenberg
disaster happened?" and Pete said, "yes, but it was a few years
later, but I did see the site of the disaster?" - or words to that
effect. I said that I knew that it was before WWII, but
neither of us could remember the year (it was 1937).
He told me that after the War was over, he and a couple of
buddies bought an AT-6 Texan and a Stearman from the US government
when it began selling off aircraft for bargain-basement prices
after the War. They intended getting rich, using the Stearman
as a crop-duster and the Texan as a banner-towing aircraft.
He remembered towing a certain banner over Milwaukee, Wisconsin in
1952. He said that the banner said something like "Re-elect
McCarthy to the U. S. Senate." I told him that I knew who Joe
McCarthy was - and, I added that he had another "brush with
history." He said that he felt that he had to apologize for
perhaps helping to re-elect the notorious senator, who is infamous
for hearings in the US Senate that tended to paint everyone and
anyone who didn't agree with him as a Communist, OR for being a
great American lawmaker who protected the US from Communism in the
early 50s. Regardless, they were not successful - Pete told
me that they had a 600 foot nylon rope attached to the banner and
it had to be stretched out down the runway in front of the
aircraft, and that this limited the size of the banner that they
could tow. A competitor had a smaller plane, but had a hook
on the plane that could be used to snag the towline after their
aircraft took off, flew a circuit and came back. He said that
they had a loop attached to the banner's tow-rope and that they
therefore could tow a much bigger banner because they had airspeed
to do so.
He then began working as an A&P again and it developed into
his teaching this important skill many people in a vocational
school. He said that he lost his last airplane in one of
those famous Oklahoma wind storms, over 20 years ago. He said
that it was a Stinson Gullwing. He said that he was in the
process of fixing it up to sell when the storm ripped it from its
tiedown and delivered it in pieces to parts unknown. He said
that all that was left at the airport were the tiedown ropes with
the metal anchors that had formerly been part of the aircraft's
wings and airframe still attached.
He saw the man that he was supposed to meet underneath the nose
of the FAAs beautiful Douglas DC-3 (the biggest plane on the Tour)
that was a couple hundred feet from us. He jumped up
(literally) and briskly walked off to meet his friend. In a
minute they disappeared among the crowd. I was left with
thoughts of Pete and his tales as I finished my snack and
drink.
I talked to several of the Tour pilots. I was waiting to
talk to Addison Pemberton and Larry Howard, the pilots of NC-485W,
a breath-taking Stearman 4DM Senior Speedmail, when a small group
of people came up to them and introduced themselves as members of
the "Stearman family." They had previously talked to the
pilots and as a special treat for a member of the family who
founded the Stearman company, one of the women was allowed to climb
into the rear cockpit of the big biplane. Larry and Addison
helped her with the two foot-steps that delivered her to the rather
small opening for the open cockpit. They told her to not grab
onto the windscreen, but to hold onto the edge of the cowling and
then swing herself up into the hole and step onto the seat, before
sitting down. She did it with skillful aplomb - a Stearman
was in a Stearman! I left them to talk about their stories
and made my way over to a line of biplanes that was parked in the
front row.