A Navy Grumman F6F-3 Hellcat fighter plane that sank more than 60 years ago was lifted from the muddy waters of Lake Michigan on Monday. “Relatively speaking, having been down there since 1945, it’s in pretty darn good shape,” Mark Kish, a worker for the marine retrieval company, told The Navy Times. The lettering on the side could still be read and gauges in the cockpit were intact, Kish said. The airplane was found in water about 260 feet deep, where it sank after a mishap during a training flight for carrier landings. The pilot of the airplane, Lt. Walter Elcock, survived the crash and is now 89 years old and living in Atlanta. His grandson, Hunter Brawley, was present for the event and was the first to sit in the cockpit. “He told me to look for a pack of Lucky Strikes he left [behind],” Brawley told the Lake County News-Sun. “That’s his sense of humor.” The airplane will be moved to the National Naval Aviation Museum in Florida, where it will be restored for display. Click here for a video of the recovered airplane on a local news site.
A Navy Grumman F6F-3 Hellcat fighter plane that sank more than 60 years ago was lifted from the muddy waters of Lake Michigan on Monday. “Relatively speaking, having been down there since 1945, it’s in pretty darn good shape,” Mark Kish, a worker for the marine retrieval company, told The Navy Times. The lettering on the side could still be read and gauges in the cockpit were intact, Kish said. The airplane was found in water about 260 feet deep, where it sank after a mishap during a training flight for carrier landings. The pilot of the airplane, Lt. Walter Elcock, survived the crash and is now 89 years old and living in Atlanta. His grandson, Hunter Brawley, was present for the event and was the first to sit in the cockpit. “He told me to look for a pack of Lucky Strikes he left [behind],” Brawley told the Lake County News-Sun. “That’s his sense of humor.” The airplane will be moved to the National Naval Aviation Museum in Florida, where it will be restored for display. Click here for a video of the recovered airplane on a local news site.
Elcock said he remembers the accident like it was yesterday, according to The Daily Mail. During a training landing on the carrier deck, the aircraft’s tail hook became entangled in a safety cable, and the airplane went out of control. “My right wing went out from under me and I went over the side,” Elcock said. The cable snapped, and Elcock had to escape the cockpit from 10 feet under water. Brawley called his grandfather while sitting in the cockpit, and told him he suspects not many people get to sit in the cockpit of an airplane their grandfather flew. “It’s made my year,” he said.
A fighter pilot has recalled the moment he crash landed in a lake – as his fighter plane was lifted from the water 65 years on.
The U.S. Navy led the recovery of the World War II F6F-3 Hellcat from the depths of Lake Michigan, Waukegan, today.
The plane – the sixth to be removed from the lake – had been submerged at 250 metres since January 5, 1944.
Grounded: The Hellcat is hoisted on to land for the first time in 65 years at Waukegan Harbour, Illinois
Lifted: The World War II F6F-3 plane will be placed in the National Naval Aviation Museum in Florida
Although its pilot, Walter Elcock, 89, said he remembers the day as though it was yesterday.
During a training exercise during which Elcock was practising landing on a carrier deck, he was brought it in too low and lost his lift.
Elcock and his plane were left dangling over the side of the carrier after its tail hook got caught on a safety cable.
‘My right wing went out from under me and I went over the side of the carrier,’ he said.
Survivor: Walter Elcock, left, today and, right, in his service uniform before crash landing his plane in 1944
Memories: Pilot Walter Elcock’s grandson Hunter Brawley sits in the plane’s cockpit today
‘So here’s the ship and I’m hanging straight down, looking at Lake Michigan.’
Elcock secured himself in the cockpit after saying he felt like something ‘was going to give’.
Then the cable snapped, plunging Elcock and the Hellcat 30-feet into the icy waters.
Elcock, who now lives in an assisted home in north-west Atlanta, said he was 10-feet under when he unhooked his seatbelt and parachute and swam to the surface.
Flying high: The Navy used Hellcats between 1943 and 1946 before phasing them out after the peak of the war
A coast guard rescue team was waiting to fish him out.
Sixty-five years later, Chicago-based A&T raised the plane, which will be placed in the National Naval Aviation Museum in Florida.
The recovery, which cost $250,000 (£151,000), was paid for by Andy Taylor, chief executive of Enterprise Rent-A-Car in honour of his father, a Second World War naval aviator who flew the Hellcat planes on the carrier Enterprise.
Elcock’s grandson Hunter Brawley was at Waukegan Harbour, Illinois, today when the Hellcat touched down on land for the first time since 1944.
Submerged: Walter Elcock crash landed the plane in Lake Michigan in 1944
He called his grandfather while sitting in the cockpit of the plane, telling him: ‘I don’t know how many people get to see the plane their grandfather flew in, but literally sit in the place their grandfather flew in. And it’s made my year.’
Elcock said when he was told of the plan eight months ago, he thought the team were ‘out of their heads’.
He added: ‘There’s an easier way to find an airplane, you know there are bound to be some sitting around.’
Rusty: The fighter planes were fitted out with cockpit armour to help protect pilots when under attack
But when asked how he felt after the planed had been rescued, Elcock said: ‘It brings back memories, some good, some not so great. I miss a lot of people I served with.’
Hellcats were used by the Navy between 1943 and 1946, phasing them out after the peak of the war.
They were designed to be built quickly and included cockpit armour and bullet-resistant windshields to help pilots survive an attack.
‘It’s made my year’: Hunter Brawley watches as the plane is raised from Waukegan Harbour