Swamp Ghosts
In Papua New Guinea, a journalist investigates the controversy over a World War II bomber
- By John Darnton
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
After the war, the plane slipped into an oblivion that lasted almost three decades, until the Australian soldiers spotted it in 1972. They provided the tail number to the Americans, who traced it to the lost B-17. The crew was told about the discovery. Word began to get around, especially after 1979, when Charles Darby, an early "warbird" collector and chronicler, printed dozens of photos of it in his seminal book, Pacific Aircraft Wrecks. Bit by bit, as the fad to recover World War II aircraft took off, trekkers made it to the site. Over time the plane was stripped of its instruments, guns and even its steering assemblies (called flight yokes), though the structure itself, resting in fresh water, remained remarkably intact.
Among others, the young Taylan was inspired by the Darby photographs. "Some people set goals to become doctors or lawyers, but when I saw those pictures, I said to myself: ‘My God, this is like looking back in time. If I do anything with my life, I've got to get to this airplane.'" He managed to do just that, many times, and each trip fed his attachment to the plane. He began, as many visitors do, to feel protective about it, convinced that it should remain where it was, like a found art object that takes its meaning from its surroundings. In 2005, to support his contention that the wreck could attract adventurous souls and that this would be a boon to the nearby villages, he led 15 people on a hike to the plane. Then he joined up with a colorful local Australian expatriate, Dale McCarthy, who trucks palm oil and, on the side, runs a handsome fishermen's lodge at Bendoroda. Together they hatched a dream: bring in tourists who go in for rough travel; let them trek the Kokoda, fish for black bass at Bendoroda and hike through the swamp to lay eyes on one of the most famous war relics in all the Pacific.
Meanwhile, Alfred Hagen had set his sights on the Swamp Ghost. A 49-year-old aviator and commercial builder from Bucks County, he describes himself as "a carpenter from Pennsylvania with grandiose delusions." For more than a decade he has been plying the jungles of PNG in search of downed aircraft. His consuming preoccupation began in 1995 with a mission: to locate the site of the B-25 crash that killed his great-uncle, Maj. William Benn, a decorated flier and squadron leader. (Benn pioneered low-altitude "skip bombing," a way of releasing a bomb so that it skips across the water to its target.) Hagen succeeded in June 1998. The wreck was 500 feet from a mountain divide. Hagen surmised that an engine had failed and that the pilot had been searching for an uncharted pass. Two years earlier, in the course of Hagen's search, something happened that fixated him on the Swamp Ghost. He spotted its tail in the grass and jotted down the GPS coordinates. Then his plane, which had hit the top of a coconut palm, became disabled. It barely made it over the mountains. "We flew through a pass and could see all the stars and the Southern Cross and in the distance the lights of Port Moresby. In those moments, it was the closest I came to living my uncle's experience. I felt a connection."
Over the years, Hagen has found parts of seven other World War II aircraft in PNG, including a P-47 Thunderbolt, and in so doing has helped experts identify the bones of some 18 MIA American fliers, even attending burials back home for some of them. In one controversial instance, convinced that the bureaucratic wheels of the Army's Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii were likely to move too slowly, he took it upon himself to call a family in Massachusetts and inform them that he had found the remains of the 22-year-old pilot whose loss they had been mourning for 51 years. He acknowledges that his call was "a gross violation of protocol," for which military authorities "called me a renegade, a loose cannon and everything else," but he is not a man to shy away from a confrontation—or a challenge. "One of the extraordinary things about what I've done is I wasn't qualified to do any of it," he said. "In life you don't have to be qualified. You just have to have audacity. I have audacity."
Like many others, Hagen has fallen under the spell of the Swamp Ghost. But unlike most, he feels the need to own it. Why? "It's the holy grail of military aviation." To leave it in the swamp, he asserts, would have been "obscene," because it was slowly but surely disintegrating. Hagen's company, Aero Archaeology, obtained an export permit for the Swamp Ghost from New Guinea's National Museum and Art Gallery in November 2005 in return for $100,000.
Earlier attempts to raise the plane, including one by the Travis Air Force Museum in California, which would have provided PNG's National War Museum with several restored planes, had dragged on in fruitless negotiations for more than ten years. But Hagen, armed with ample money and working with Rob Greinert, an Australian who has salvaged more than a dozen aircraft from PNG, was determined to press ahead. He assembled a crew of 43 people, including a B-17 mechanic, a specialty towing company from Penndel, Pennsylvania, and a five-man documentary film crew. The group labored for close to four weeks, raising the craft with weighted air bags, severing the wings, dismounting the four engines, removing the tail and lifting the fuselage. The operation was arduous—they had to contend with everything from crocodiles in their base camp to scorpions in their wading boots—but successful. Their Russian-built military helicopter hoisted out the various parts and placed them on the barge, waiting nearby. The left wing dropped from its sling half a mile from the site but was recovered and, according to the salvagers, suffered only minor damage. Some of the locals who worked with the salvagers—and who were paid handsomely—are content. "We heard a lot from our fathers about what it was like working with the Americans in the war," said Luke Nunisa, relaxing in the lounge of the luxurious Tufi Dive resort. "So it was a real opportunity to see them work. They treated us fairly."
But by the time the barge reached the coastal town of Lae and the plane was crated for shipping to the United States, the controversy over its removal—on New Guinea TV and in the main newspaper, the Post-Courier—had reached deep into the government. A special committee of Parliament found that the National Museum had no right to sell war surplus (only to document and monitor it) and insisted that the Swamp Ghost, belonging to the state, should not be permitted to leave the country. The committee said the plane was worth $3 million to $5 million and demanded that Hagen and Greinert be investigated by the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary for their roles in salvaging it. "The trade in war surplus materials is clearly big business," the committee concluded, and it said the museum, under "the improper influence of foreigners," had colluded in the illegal sale abroad of 89 planes or parts of planes, of which 85 ended up in the hands of private individuals, not museums.
The museum director, under pressure, asked the director of customs to hold off allowing the plane to be exported until a top government body, the National Executive Council, sorted out the mess. Hagen is sticking to his guns. His side claims that the parliamentary committee had an ax to grind and no jurisdiction in the matter. "I bought it legally, I salvaged it legally, I own it legally," he told me. "If they don't allow me to have it, how can any international corporation possibly do business with PNG?" He blames the media. "They drummed it up that I was raping New Guinea....Because I'm a businessman from America, [they say] I must have been involved in corruption because how else would I have gotten it." Hagen has launched a lawsuit, claiming upward of $15 million in expenses and damages, according to his local attorney, Camillus Narakobi. "We insist the board of trustees of the museum clearly has authority to execute salvages of this nature," Narakobi said.
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Comments (26)
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Hi Claire Dae, how do I find your email address? I'd really like to see photos of it if you have any. I love old planes! (:
Thanks
Posted by Tim Supramaniam on January 27,2012 | 01:50 PM
Hi,I am a 24yr old Papua New Guinean female and am interested in war relics.. Lately,my mum,my aunty and i have been taking pictures of an American war aircraft(P-26) believed to be shot by the Japanese and have landed in the jungles of my native village of Okapa,Eastern Highlands.It took us a day to reach the plane.Please email me if you're intrested in learning more about the still missing war plane.
Cheers,
Claire Dae
Lae,Morobe Province
Papua New Guinea.
Posted by Claire Dae on October 31,2011 | 12:17 AM
Check out my blog. I am covering the entire series and also throwing in some fun facts.
http://swamp-people.blogspot.com
Posted by Mrs. Walker on October 20,2010 | 01:28 AM
A well researched and documented story although I would not have expeceted less from the Smithsonian and Mr Darnton. The B-17E played a significant role in the earliest history of the 92nd Bomb Group (8th Air Force). The first 8th AF organization in Europe was the 97th Bomb Group.They had the E Bird. When the 92nd arrived in August 1942 they were equipped with the B-17F. Bureaucratic heads got together and ordered that the 92nd and 97th exchange aircraft; that the 97th would initiate the daylight bombing campaign; and that the 92nd esatblish and run the Combat Crew Replacement Center (CCRC). Needless to say there was gnashing of teeth and interesting communications between Headquarters and various Group Commanders. In the annals of the 92nd and well hidden is the term "The Rape of the 92nd" which describes this exchange of aircraft. The 92nd finally went on operations on May 14,1943 with Ship uards at Kiel the target. The 92nd led the last raid of the 8th on April 25, 1945; has never been off operations and today is the 92nd Air Refueling Wing, Fairchild AFB, WA
Posted by Irv Baum on August 13,2010 | 10:28 PM
If anybody can do justice to the story of the SWAMP GHOST and its crew, it is the restoration people at the PIMA AIR & SPACE MUSEUM in Tucson Arizona. I see their miracles constantly as a docent in that wonderful museum.
Jim Mulligan
Posted by Jim Mulligan on June 20,2010 | 12:32 AM
I was fascinated reading these accounts. I was too young to understand what was really happening at the time.
I believe our children and grandchildren need to see these historical planes, preserved or restored. I would like to read Mr. Cumes book, "Haverleigh".
I was fortunate to see Paul Allen's restored planes at Paine Field, Everett, WA and watch two of them fly! A real thrill.
Bette Hill, WA
Posted by Bette Hill on September 11,2009 | 10:21 AM
I was fascinated reading these accounts. I was too young to understand what was really happening at the time.
I believe our children and grandchildren need to see these historical planes, preserved or restored. I would like to read Mr. Cumes book, "Haverleigh".
I was fortunate to see Paul Allen's restored planes at Paine Field, Everett, WA and watch two of them fly! A real thrill.
Bette Hill, WA
Posted by Bette Hill on September 11,2009 | 10:21 AM
All these stories bring back memories. Aged 19, I disembarked at Port Moresby on 6 June 1942 from the Taroona to join what was then called "New Guinea Force." Later it became 1 Aust Corps. My disembarkation was just six weeks before the Japs landed at Buna/Gona and pushed through to Kokoda against the courageous opposition of no more than a hundred or so officers and men of the Australian 39th Battalion. The Japs reached Iorabaiwa - about thirty miles from Moresby - before Tokyo acknowledged that they were beaten and the Emperor himself signed the order to withdraw. When they did, with the Australians in hot pursuit, it marked the end of the invasion threat to Australia; and, together with the Australian victory at Milne Bay in August/September 1942, it also marked the limit to the Japanese thrust south. From that point on, the only outcome kof the Pacific War had to be victory for the Allies and the surrender of Japan. I wrote a novel - "Haverleigh" - especially encompassing these Papua/New Guinea campaigns in 1942 - and afterwards. It has done well and is still available on Amazon. Please tell me what you think of it if you get around to reading it.
Posted by James Cumes on February 21,2009 | 05:12 AM
Kudos to Fred Hagen and all those involved in the recovery process. I have been following this story for the past few years and am elated to hear she is coming home. (probraly home by now) Can't wait to hear the next chapter.
Posted by Tori Miller on December 24,2008 | 05:13 PM
The story of the Swamp Ghost is great, I have done a lot of research on WW2 and to read the accounts of the crew of this old Warbird it is brilliant I sincerely hope there is a happy ending for this once gracefull B-17 Dave from England
Posted by Dave Halligan on December 6,2008 | 03:25 PM
In 1944 I was stationed on Biak Island (Beroke Airstrip)and a B-24 Air Group was stationed I believe at Mokmer Air Strip. Just before the war ended there was a huge field covered with hundred of B-24's parked wingtip to wingtip I have often wondered what every happened to all of those planes that were never used in combat. If anyone was stationed at Biak on northern tip of New Guinea I would like to hear from you. I have really enjoyed reading about the Swamp Ghost. Ben Robertson email: bculler@bellsouth.net
Posted by Ben Robertson on November 8,2008 | 11:21 PM
i was there with hq co,155 inf reg,31st div leave it there at its orig site. will party looking for info on parent in 31st div contact me happy veterans day !
Posted by elmer [herb] hoff on November 7,2008 | 03:21 PM
I would like to correct some misinformation that have appeared since the PNG National Museum decided to allow the Swamp ghost out of the country.Firstly,let me introduce myself,my name is Soroi Marepo Eoe. I have worked in the PNG national Muesum for the last 30 years(May, 1978- June, 2005)after I graduated with degree in Social Anthropology. I became the first national to become the Curator of Anthropology in 1985 and subsequently its Director for 20 years ( 1985 - 2005). I hope my coming out of the closet will clear grey areas in this debate. I am throughly breed museum profissional and I have never comprised when it came to laws which protect the heritage or the specimen. Sad as it may look the decission to allow Swamp Ghost out of PNG was the only option available to my management and the Board given all the factors which rendered the aircraft in a very risky situation. The risks range from PNG governments' failure in not providing adquate budgetry support in protecting and restoring heritage objects over the years to increased activities of "Scrap Metal industry" which was directly responsible for scavaging and destorying many war relices which were not touched by either unscuplus dealers or climatic factors.In my honest view both under PNG heritage laws as well as under International the Covention in particular 1970 UNESCO convention PNG government has failed and continue to fail its legal and moral obligations. The spirit of this convention is clear," every country whether it is party to this covention or member of UNESCO has moral, legal and political duty to protect this heritage for its citizen and for Mankind.
Posted by Soroi Marepo Eoe on October 26,2008 | 09:53 PM
I agree with Mr. Hoover. The plane was being progressively stripped. The same thing happens to crash sites in the U.S. - there is a B-17C in a national forest in California and people even trucked out the engines. If you look at what PNG has done it's all just wreckage on display; in some cases shot with paint but with corrosion underneath. Leaving it to slowly disintegrate in a swamp is no option other than to assuage the national pride of the PNG people. If necessary. so be it but far better to do professional conservation and restoration, with display in a climate-controlled museum, on as many of those aircraft as possible. Japanese scrap merchants carted out tons of planes for their aluminum in the 50's and 60's and the Papuans never said a word until long after the easy ones - the Tonys, Oscars, etc., were almost all gone. Incidentally I am from Fort Worth and this is a 7th Bomb Wing aircraft. 7th Bomb Wing finished up flying B-52s here in my city.
Posted by Griffin Murphey DDS on October 25,2008 | 08:13 AM
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