Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Decent

About 10:50 the L8 is sighted along the coast highway. An off duty seaman driving along the highway, heading for a day at the beach, takes a picture of the L-8. The blimp is partially deflated and the seaman can tell the L-8 is behaving strangely. He and his photogragh would end up in the inquest later on.

The lettering along the center of the ballonnet, " N A V Y", starts to form a V-shape, merging the A V...

The L-8 comes in just above the sand. Two men swimming in the water attempt to control the blimp, grabbing at it's guide ropes. The blimp, too massive and being driven by the wind, rolls along the beach, unstoppable. After making it over the dunes and onto the golf course, still venting drags along the grass. The bomb on the right side of the gondola gets dislodged and drops onto the ground.

At this point, the Navy receives an anonymous call saying that the blimp has crashed onto the golf course but that they have the crew.

As trucks are dispatched from Moffet Field to the golf course for a recovery, a second anonymous call comes in saying that the airman are not aboard!
This is to become one of the oddest bits of the mystery to solve.

Why would anyone call the air field and say they have the crew and then contradict themselves. I spent a long time wondering who would have been at the crash site and what motive they might have for saying the pilots were not there after-all....
The answer to this was uncovered at the library at the Pensacola Naval Air Station where the restored L-8 gondola now resides.

If you have a chance to go to Pensacola, the air museum is worth the trip alone! For L-8 officinadoes it's the gold ring. See http://NavalAviationMuseum.org.  I loved the museum, but being able to touch the L-8 was the thrill of a lifetime. I only knew 90% of the story at that point a couple of years ago. I've spent the intervening years getting together bits of the story that are the first and second acts in this play..... San Francisco was the last act. I've spent several years piecing this together, traveled a lot of miles around the country, and at the end of the trip found that the story took me home again....

But back to the story in 1942....

Having been lightened by 350 lbs, a gust of wind lifts the partially deflated blimp into the air once more and on it's way to Daly City for the final bits of this chapter of the story...


Sunday, February 20, 2011

Eyewitnesses

The L-8 circled over the spot for about an hour with the crews of two ships as witnesses.

The crew of the fishing boat, the Daisy Grey, and a Liberty ship, the Albert Gallatin. Both crews gave testimony during the inquest that was to follow...

The L-8 dropped one flare and circled over he spot attempting to use the MAD, Magnetic Anomoly Detector, trying to detect if there was a large metal mass under the oil slick. Other than visual sightings, MAD was used to detect submarines, but had a very low rate of success. Less than a 4% success rate, MAD is a metal detector mounted in the gondola of the blimp.

Circling the spot, coming down towards the surface, the L-8 continued to circle until just after 9am. At tat point, it dropped ballast, and rising, headed back to  towards San Francisco instead of continuing to the Farralone Islands, site of a radio listening post, or heading north to Reyes Point.

Having not heard back from the crew of the L8 and unable to make contact, Moffett Field sent aircraft out to search and broadcast that all aircraft in the area should be on the lookout for the L8.

A Pan Am flight heading towards San Francisco spotted the L-8 at 10:20 , heading towards the Golden Gate Bridge. It was under control...

At about 10:30 witnesses saw the blimp suddenly rose dramaticly at a sharp angle and go up into the clouds...

Friday, February 18, 2011

L-8: The mytsery begins...

Hi.Most people have not heard about the L8, so let me introduce you to a fascinating mystery from World War 2 that has gone unsolved so far...

 Blimps were used in the war to patrol for enemy submarines. There were a number of bases throughout the United States. Two notable bases were Lakehurst, New Jersey and Moffett Field, California. Lakehurst was made famous by the crash of the Hindenburg in 1937. Lakehurst was the center of blimp activity on the east coast. Moffett Field, also know as Sunnyvale N.A.S - Naval Air Station - included an air field on Treasure Island in San Francisco Bay. It was from this air field that the blimps took off and patrolled the seas looking for Japanese  submarines that hunted along the Pacific coastline.

One of these blimps was the L8. Purchased from Good Year, it was a new addition to the Lighter Than Air ships used by the Navy for anything from patrols to delivering goods. It was part of squadron 32.The L8 was the blimp that delivered supplies to the USS Hornet in April of 1942 for the Doolittle Raid on Japan. It flew missions from Treasure Island to the Farralone Islands and up to Reyes Point with a crew of three men attempting to site submarines.
It was equipped with two 350 pound bombs it could drop on the enemy.


On the morning of August 16th, 1942, the L-8 took off on it's morning mission. On board were Lieutenant Ernest Dewitt Cody and Ensign Charles Ellis Adams. The mechanic assigned to the flight, J Riley Hill, prepared the L-8 for it's flight,

As it was about to take-off, Hill was told that the ship was too heavy and ordered to say behind.

The L-8 took off at six a.m. At 7:50 a.m., about five miles east of the Farralone Island, they radioed that they were investigating an oil slick. "Standby..." was the last anyone heard of the crew of the L-8.....