Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutDuckworth, Col. Joe - Bio IIAnne Boxkin - WWII Bryan Air Base.doc = Page 111 BRYAN AIR FORCE BASE and Colonel Joe "the Duck" Duckworth Although saving many from death by their joint efforts at the only instrument training school of its kind in the US Army Air Force, they are remembered as the first to fly into the eye of a hurricane. Both the Bryan Air Base and Colonel Joe Duckworth's system of instrument training are credited with being major contributors to the WWII aviation effort and the Berlin airlift in 1948. It all started with a sudden mission change early in 1943 when Bryan Air Field was activated as Bryan Air Force Base in Brazos County, Texas, becoming a school for instrument instructors. Weather in all theaters of operation it seems had turned out to be far more dangerous than the enemy, with hundreds of pilots being lost because of a lack of proficiency in instrument flying. "Losses in combat were less than those sustained from ignorance of instrument flying alone." "For God's sake, get all the instrument flying you can," an English pilot wrote to his friend taking flight training in Texas. "It's the difference between life and death over here." Yet its head instructor Col. Duckworth, regarded as the "father" of modem day instrument flying, never saw combat, did not fly fighters, bombers, or helicopters, and was never in the air rescue business. Never the less the standardized system of instrument flying developed at the Brazos County base was one of the most significant contributions made to pilot training. A greatly reduced worldwide weather-related accident rate became the result of the training and its spread throughout the USAAF. Col. Duckworth's "Full Panel" Attitude System whereby two gyro instruments were used in conjunction with the three basic instruments plus the magnetic compass, the rate of climb indicator, and the clock -- eventually were used in "flying" the Link trainer. In the end; however, these significant accomplishments during World War II are widely forgotten. But not their feat of being first to fly into a hurricane! The story is told that on the morning of27 July 1943 British pilots being trained on instruments at Bryan were surprised by news of a hurricane because of shutdown of weather-related information after Pearl Harbor. (Since German U-boat activity was suspected in the Gulf of Mexico, all marine radio broadcasts were silenced in July 1943.) We can only imagine the dilemma facing local weather officials as the storm bore down on Galveston Bay -- where the Hurricane of 1900 killed as estimated 8,000 and a 1915 hurricane tested the Galveston seawall and killed more than 275 people. But the Galveston-Houston area was the location of many oil refineries crucial to the war effort and news of a hurricane strike could have aided the enemy. Over at Bryan Air Force Base, word spread that July morning about a hurricane coming ashore near Galveston and that the planes at the field may have to be flown out for safety. Many of the British pilots, "aces" from earlier battles over Europe, already felt that they deserved to be trained in the top United States fighter planes -- not the AT-6 ~ Anne Bgykin. - WWIIB~an Air Ba~e.doc ---'. ..~:~~-"._, ----~- - -~- Page 2 ~ "Texan" single engine trainer used at Bryan. When the Brits heard that their planes might have to be flown away from the storm, they really started gigging the instructors about the frailty of their trainer. The problem was that few, if any European flyers had ever experienced a true hurricane and thought it was just another big thunderstorm. Finally Colonel Duckworth had enough of the ribbing of these pilots and bet them that he could fly the "Texan" into the storm and back. Well, the bet was on. A highball to the winner! Colonel Duckworth then looked across the breakfast table at Lieutenant Ralph 0' Hair, the only navigator at the field that morning and asked him to fly along. O'Hair was taken back but agreed to fly with him due to his respect for Duckworth's skill as a pilot. Since they felt that Headquarters wouldn't approve the flight due to the risk of the aircraft and the crew, they decided to do it without official permission. The main problem that passed through Lt. O'Hair's mind was that if their single engine quit for some reason, like being flooded out from the heavy rain, they would be in deep trouble. As they closed on the hurricane which was now ashore, he thought about what it would be like if he had to use the parachute. As they approached the storm at a height of between four thousand to nine thousand feet, the air became very turbulent. He described the flight now as like "being tossed about like a stick in a dog's mouth." The rain was very heavy as they flew through the darkness, fighting the updrafts and downdrafts. Suddenly they broke into the eye of the storm. (This was not the purpose of the flight, but really an accident.) The sky was filled with bright clouds and it seemed that they were surrounded by a shower curtain of darker clouds. As they looked down they could see the countryside. The storm had indeed moved inland and the eye seemed to be about nine or ten miles across. They circled inside and as they exited the eye, the dark overcast and heavy rain again pounded them until they made their way out of the storm and back toward Bryan Field. As they arrived back at the field, the weather officer, Lieutenant William Jones Burdick, asked to be flow into the storm, so O'Hair jumped out and the weather officer flew off into the hurricane with Duckworth. After that flight, Bryan Field became a Mecca for Allied pilots wanting to learn the fine art of "instrument flying". That night the bet was paid and no more comments were given on the sturdiest of the AT-6 "Texan" trainer or the value of the instruments. That was also the last flight into a hurricane for Lt. O'Hair. "The Duck" went on to become base commander of Hickam AFB in Hawaii. All who took his training at Bryan and survived bad weather would probably agree that they owe much, possibly their very lives, to this man. Bryan Air Base kept on training pilots on instruments -- saving countless lives. Barbara Donalson Althaus Bryan, Texas References: Handbook of Texas Online "Bryan Air Force Base"; TTI, Vol 40, No.3 online at tti.tamu.edu; Bill Page re www.hurricaneconsulting.net l~1L~~y~.:_YY~11 ~ry~!:.?ase.doc ~.~ Page 31 "Flying Into The Eye," The Weather Doctor Almanac 2003; online at www.islandnet.com "Colonel Joseph Duckworth", Historical Albion Michigan, online at www.albionmich.com/history C. V. Glines, "Duckworth's Legacy",The Air Force Association (AFA) www.afa.org/magazine/1990 WWII Bryan Air Base