Crash Junkie
Flight instructor Craig Fuller scales mountains, combs deserts and trudges through wilderness to track down old airplane wrecks
- By Reed Karaim
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Shelves on the walls of his office hold roughly 160 two-inch-thick white binders documenting crash sites across the Western United States—a trove of photographs, maps and old news articles. But his real treasure is in his desk: the official crash reports for almost every accident involving planes belonging to the U.S. Air Force and its predecessors from 1918 through 1955 on more than a thousand rolls of microfilm. Each roll has 2,000 to 3,000 pages, which means Fuller has two million to three million pages of documented disaster. The rolls cost him $30 a piece. This explains why he has the only microfilm reader I've ever seen in someone's home. "And two microfilm printers," he says. "Everyone should have a spare."
In 1998, in an effort to recoup some of the $30,000 he spent on microfilm, Fuller began selling accident reports to other crash junkies. His collection quickly made him a clearinghouse for fellow enthusiasts. The day Fuller and I went to the mountains, we met up with two of his buddies: Jim Fusco, a wiry 53-year-old maintenance planner for an electric power plant outside Willcox, Arizona, and Dave Peterson, 44, a teacher from Livermore, California. Swapping stories about brutal hikes, wrong turns and the discovery of long-lost planes in the wilderness, they make wreck chasing sound like a Hardy Boys adventure. "Everybody loves a treasure hunt," Fuller points out.
The plane we were hunting was one Fuller had long wanted to get a look at: an AT-17B (a twin-engine trainer commonly known as a Bobcat) that crashed on December 28, 1943, in the rugged terrain. Although the bodies of the two pilots were removed and the wreck partly buried by the Army Air Forces in the 1940s, the exact location of the plane was lost over time. Searching for it had been an obsession for several wreck chasers until two years ago, when Fusco found it with the aid of Herman Wicke, a rancher who originally located the wreck in 1945. Fusco feels sure he can lead us back to the site. He'd taken a GPS reading, after all. But the mountain is a maze of deep ravines, where GPS locators don't work so well. Two hours in, we are still bushwhacking our way over cactus-infested slopes.
When we finally find the AT-17B, it appears to be little more than a tangle of rusted metal. Fuller seems to sense my disappointment. "People think they’re going to find these airplanes that look like you can fly them out of there," he says, "and usually they look a lot worse than this."
The only evidence of the two pilots, Lt. Robert Andrus and his student, Cadet Gayle Kral, is a white metal cross with their names on it, placed there by Fusco in 2001. In all the wrecks Fuller has visited, he's found human remains in only two, and then only small fragments of bone. People often ask him if he finds body parts, but, he insists, "it's not about that at all." Rather, it's about remembrance. America's rush to transform itself into an air power after Pearl Harbor took a greater toll in lives than most people realize. About 15,000 airmen died in training mishaps in the primitive, often-difficult-to-fly aircraft of the era, roughly about a quarter of those actually killed in combat. "It wasn't combat," says Fuller, "but it was part of the cost of keeping America free."
Fuller and his friends have been able to return dog tags and flight wings to the families of lost airmen. Perhaps more importantly, they've been able to fill in some emotional blanks for relatives. One of Fuller's most rewarding moments came when he was able to reassure the widow of Air Force Capt. Hudson T. West that she was not to blame for the death of her husband in an accident over Nevada in 1959. For decades she had wondered if her failure to make him breakfast that morning—something stressed as the duty of all good Air Force wives at the time—had left him sluggish at a critical moment. But the crash report, which Fuller found, indicated her husband was cut off by another plane during a mock dogfight and that the accident was beyond his control. "When you can help someone like that," Fuller says, "it really gives what we do a purpose."
Wreck chasing got its start in Britain, where downed planes were part of the post-World-War-II landscape. For a long time the people who sought out crashes were mainly souvenir hunters, or salvagers searching for parts. Fuller admits that when he began, he, too, "hauled down whatever I could." But gradually he began to see the wrecks as part of aviation history, as memorials to the men who lost their lives in distant corners of the nation they served.
Now, he says, he has "a hard time picking up anything." (The stuff in his house dates from years ago.) He thinks of himself as an amateur archaeologist and works through an organization he started, Aviation Archaeological Investigation and Research, to promote an approach that protects the integrity of the sites. "There's this community of crash enthusiasts starting up that goes out to the sites and contemplates what happened there," he says, "but tries not to do any damage, tries to leave them for others to study."
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Comments (7)
I am the sole survivor of a crash that occured on Sunday, November 2nd 1958. 32 fellow cadets and I including female members called Angel Flight) were returning from a weekender at Eglin Air Force base in Florida. We entered a storm rolling in across the Great Plains. Our pilot tried to evading the ice and sleet but finally to descend from 14,000 feet to just above the mountains. Eventually the pilots found a break in the storm and saw what appeared to be a field. Diving the nose down and then pulling it up, he really revved the engines. But it was over in seconds. They sputtered and we crashed tailfirst at about 117 knots. We smashed into a mountain slope. Thankfully, there was no explosion, but of the 30 cadets on board, only five survived. And because we hit tail first, there was no way out for the injured survivors. In time 2 semi-able-bodied cadets did make it out and got help. In a shed where a couple of weekend flyboys were restoring a WW1 Spad, a May Day was sent out. The Air Force already knew our 2 engine transport was overdue and coupled with the May Day, they knew our approx location, north of the Charlottesville Airport about 4 miles. Because of the storm, the rescuers, made up of AF personnel and Civil Air Patrol cadets from W.Va., DC, and Maryland finally found us on Tuesday. We were almost frozen. I can’t remember being removed from the plane. I think it was an old C-46 Commando with seats along the fuselage. After rescuers removed the dead and injured, they towed the airplane further away from the crash site until investigators could determine the reason for the crash. CAP cadet Norm Chipps from the DC unit, told me in 1973 that the airplane definitely crashed, a little northwest of the airport and probably within 3 to 4 miles north of it. To this date, I still have not found exactly where it crashed and can’t get any records.
Posted by Gordon M. Callison on September 20,2011 | 04:16 PM
I'm looking for Robert Roosa who is interested in 44-49041. Please email candlcobb@vermontel.net
Posted by Chip Cobb on June 8,2010 | 06:25 PM
I have an entire blade of a prop from the crash in brown county, ohio that occurred after wwII. Would like to know where I can find out some more info about it.
Posted by Brian Tracy on January 26,2010 | 08:22 PM
Do you know anything about a hiker who found the plane wreck of Morrie Pitts, his two teenaged boys, and their two big dogs back in the 1950's. He was piloting his small aircraft and went missing several years earlier somewhere between Washington and California, I believe. I remember that the remains of one boy and I believe one dog was missing from the downed aircraft.
Posted by Linda Allen on September 27,2009 | 07:18 PM
1loohing for photos of b-24 #44-49041RECOVERED 1957 trento italy
Posted by robert l roosa on September 20,2009 | 07:16 PM
Do you have any information about a pane or helicopter crash near Angeline Lake in the alpine Lakes wilderness in Washington state over 25 years ago?
Posted by John Romano on September 17,2009 | 04:40 PM
WONDERING IF YOU KNOW ABOUT A MILIARY PLANE THAT CRASHED DURING A FLYING MISSION DURING THE 40S IN BROWN COUNTY OHIO
Posted by gary paul mc daniel on August 23,2008 | 08:19 PM