Ninety-Year-Old Retired AF Colonel Makes Final Flight In A
Piper Saratoga
More than 70 years of flying experience came to a close after
one last flight in a Piper Saratoga aircraft May 20 in Valdosta,
GA. While retired Col. Clarence Parker has been a pilot for the
majority of his life, the now 90-year-old has decided to hang up
his wings and start a new chapter in his life.
Col. Parker At Saratoga's Controls
"I have decided that seven decades of flying was a great run,"
Colonel Parker said. "I wanted to stop on my own terms, and not
when the doctors or my health dictated it."
Colonel Parker started his aviation career when he was just 20
years old. In 1940, he wanted to join the U.S. Army Air Corps, but
his application was put on hold. Then he decided to earn his
private pilot's license as a civilian instead. A year later,
Colonel Parker was called to action. "I had just landed from a
flight when someone ran up and told me the Japanese had bombed
Pearl Harbor," he recalled. "Within 48 hours of the attack, I was
contacted by the U.S. Army Air Corps and instructed to go to San
Antonio."
From that day forward, Colonel Parker's career took many twists
and turns. He flew more than 35 different aircraft, ranging from
the P-40 Warhawk to the B-52 Stratofortress. He has flown in three
different wars and several combat missions: World War II, the
Berlin Airlift, the Korean War and the Vietnam War.
Dorothy Lee Parker, the colonel's wife, remembers many of the
bases they both visited during their 69 years of marriage. "We have
been all over the world," she said. "When you're married to a
pilot, you always seem to come second because the aircraft and the
mission are always first. Despite that, I always enjoy traveling
with him, and he's going to miss flying like hell."
Col. Parker
He served his country from 1942 until 1971, ending his career as
the wing commander at Moody Air Force Base, Ga. Even after the
colonel retired, he continued to fly as a civilian for 30 more
years. "He has been flying the entire time we have been married,"
Dorothy said with laughter. "After nearly 70 years of marriage, I
finally get to be his main focus."
Colonel Parker shared a few words of advice before leaving the
flying to the pilots of later generations. "Aviation is not only a
challenge but an opportunity for young people," he said. "I
encourage all pilots to approach flying with vigor and
determination, and enjoy the rewards of your hard work."
Once Colonel Parker parts ways with flying, he and his wife plan
to continue visiting family as well as traveling around the U.S.
and Europe.
ANN Salutes Airman 1st Class Benjamin Wiseman