U.S. Air Force B-36 crashes at Fairchild Air
Force Base,
killing seven airmen and injuring three others, on March 29, 1954
By Daryl C. McClary
Posted 9/10/2010
HistoryLink.org Essay 9488
On March 29, 1954, a huge U.S. Air Force B-36 crashes while
practicing takeoffs and landings at Fairchild Air Force Base in
Spokane County, Washington. Of the 10 crew members aboard the aircraft, seven
are killed and three survive the accident. It is the fourth and last
crash of a B-36 at Fairchild AFB during the years it is in service
there (1951-1958).
Large, Powerful, Slow
The B-36 Peacemaker was the largest land-based bomber in the
world. Built by Convair (Consolidated-Vultee Aircraft Corporation)
in Fort Worth, Texas, for the Air Force, the aircraft had a wingspan
of 230 feet, was 163 feet long, and powered by six Pratt & Whitney
R-4360 Wasp Major 28-cylinder radial engines, with the propellers 19
feet in diameter. Although the B-36 was designed during World War II
(1941-1944) to replace the Boeing B-29 Superfortress, the first
operational model didn’t fly until July 8, 1948.
Although the Peacemaker had great range, 8,715 miles, it was
relatively slow and considered obsolescent in the new era of
jet-powered aircraft. To improve performance, the Air Force added
four General Electric J47 Turbojet engines mounted in two outer wing
nacelles, increasing the aircraft’s speed and altitude. Assigned to
the Strategic Air Command (established in 1946) the B-36 was
supposedly capable of delivering 72,000 pounds of conventional bombs
or a nuclear bomb to any country in the world and return without
refueling, making it a major deterrent to enemy aggression. For a
major piece of military hardware, the Peacemaker had a relatively
short life span, only 10 years. The B-36, which never saw combat,
was replaced between 1958 and 1959 with the Boeing B-52
Stratofortress, America’s first swept-wing jet bomber. During
missions, the B-36 normally carried a 15-man crew, but on training
and proficiency flights, the number of crewmen aboard often varied.
The Crash
At approximately 5:45 p.m. on Monday, March 29, 1954, B-36B-1-CF
Peacemaker No. 44-92032, attached to the 92nd Bombardment Wing,
325th Bomb Squadron, at Fairchild Air Force Base (AFB) had just
lifted off from Runway 23 when the aircraft suddenly made a sharp
turn to the right and crashed just off the runway. The plane barely
missed an American-LaFrance, Model O-11A, fire-rescue truck on
standby at taxiway 10, narrowly missed several B-36 aircraft on the
flightline, plowed through a new, unoccupied building, hit a ditch,
flipped upside down, and exploded into flames. The wrecked bomber
came to rest near the 10th Antiaircraft Artillery and Wherry housing
project.
Of the 10 airmen aboard the B-36 for the training mission, seven
were killed and three survived the accident. The survivors, all
members of the cockpit crew, escaped through the pilot’s hatch and
crawled through the burning wreckage to safety. Firefighters found
the men in the debris field suffering from burns and other injuries
and rushed them to the Fairchild base hospital. Witnesses to the
crash said it was unbelievable anyone could have escaped the
accident alive, but the hospital reported that the survivors were in
good condition.
Fortunately, the B-36, which carries normally carries over 20,000
gallons of aviation gasoline, didn’t have that much aboard for the
training mission. But, because of the magnesium used in its
construction, B-36s burned fiercely. Although fire trucks smothered
the flames with fire-retarding chemical foam in a relatively short
time, the plane was a total loss. The wreckage was so hot that the
bodies couldn’t be removed for three hours.
Two firefighters were injured while fighting the blaze and
hospitalized. Airman First Class Charles L. Johnson suffered flash
burns on his face and Staff Sergeant Elmer D. Jackson suffered a
broken left forearm after being struck by a wheel strut when a tire
exploded.
The Investigation
An Air Force crash-probe team, commanded by Brigadier General
Richard J. O’Keefe, director of Flight Safety Research, was
immediately dispatched from Norton AFB, San Bernardino, California,
to begin the arduous task of sifting through the wreckage, looking
for clues to the cause of the accident. Fortunately, the cockpit
crew survived the crash and was able to provide valuable information
to the investigators. The pilots said immediately upon becoming
airborne, the ship unexpectedly swerved to the right, the landing
gear hit some maintenance stands and crashed.
Colonel Phillip Main, commander of Fairchild AFB, said the
investigation team determined the accident was caused by a
mechanical malfunction which made the B-36 lose directional control
at takeoff. Although not stated, it was known that the
variable-pitch propellers, which also provided reverse thrust for
breaking on landing, sometimes reversed on takeoff or while in
flight -- with fatal consequences. Another unstated possibility was
a malfunction of a control surface, such as the ailerons,
controlling roll, the rudder, controlling yaw, or the elevator,
controlling pitch.
No Fun to Fly
The preceding B-36 accident at Fairchild (the third) occurred on
Saturday, February 26, 1954, when B-36B-15-CF Peacemaker No.
44-92069 crashed on the end of Runway 23 as it ran up its six Wasp
Major radial engines and four GE J-47 Turbojets for takeoff. When an
alert flight engineer detected a fire in one of the radial engines,
the takeoff was aborted. The main landing collapsed, however,
rupturing a fuel tank, and the ship burst into flames. Twenty
airmen, aboard the bomber for a training mission, scrambled to
safety unharmed. The aircraft, equipped with 16, 20mm, cannons, was
fully loaded with ammunition which continued to explode as
firefighters poured chemical foam onto the fiercely burning
gasoline. The bomber was totally destroyed in the mishap.
Generally, the crew’s opinion of the B-36 ranged from love to hate.
The ship’s size made it prone to accidents and fires were
commonplace in its six radial engines. In an interview for The
American Experience episode “Race for the Superbomb,” broadcast on
PBS in January 1999, Brigadier General James V. Edmundson
(1915-2001), commander of the 57th Air Division at Fairchild AFB
from 1952 to 1954, remarked: “Well, the B-36 really wasn't much fun
to fly. It's a gigantic thing. They used to say it was like sitting
on your front porch and flying your house around. It was big on the
outside and small on the inside. Very cramped for the crews. And the
missions were long.”
During the years the B-36 was in production, Convair built 385
Peacemakers. While in service (1948-1958), approximately 10 percent
of the aircraft were written off or destroyed in non-combat related
accidents. The remainder were retired between 1958 and 1959 and
eventually cut up and sold for scrap. Today, only four Peacemakers
survive and are on public display at the Castle AFB Museum, Atwater,
California; the Strategic Air and Space Museum at Offutt AFB,
Ashland, Nebraska; the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force,
Wright-Patterson AFB, Dayton, Ohio; and, the last B-36 built, at the
Pima Air and Space Museum, Tucson, Arizona.
Survivors and Casualties
Survivors
• Walter M. Keller, Captain (aircraft commander/pilot), Long
Island, New York
• Leroy B. Ross, First Lieutenant (first engineer), Houston,
Texas
• Virgil L. Westling, Major (pilot), Marquette, Kansas
Casualties
• Willard Daniels, Airman First Class, age 22, Gilmore Lake,
Minong, Wisconsin
• Heyward B. Davis, Master Sergeant, age 37, Plant City, Florida
• George W. King, Airman Second Class, age 21, Hustonville,
Kentucky
• Rodney A. Paulson, First Lieutenant, age 29, Ames, Iowa
• Frank Rea, Master Sergeant, age 28, Ozone Park, New York
• James E. Ryan, Staff Sergeant, age 30, Kansas City, Missouri
• Richard S. Scalia, Airman First Class, age 21, Waltham,
Massachusetts
Sources
Daniel Ford, “B-36: Bomber at the Crossroads,” Air and
Space/Smithsonian, April/May 1996; “Near Spokane: B-36 Crash at Air
Force Base Kills Seven,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 30, 1954,
p. 1; “Loss of Control Blamed for Crash of B-36,” Ibid., March 31,
1954, p. 2; “Lost Control Cost 7 Lives in B-36 Crash,” The Seattle
Times, March 30, 1954, p. 10; “B-36 Bomber Crash Kills 7 in Flames,”
The Walla Walla Union-Bulletin, March 30, 1954, p. 1; “Fire Destroys
$3½ Million B-36 Bomber,” Ibid., February 27, 1954; “Air Force
Investigates Plane Crash,” The Albuquerque Journal, March 31, 1954,
p. 20; “Lost Direction Control Blamed for B-36 Smash,” Spokane Daily
Chronicle, March 30, 1954, p. 1; “Probe Continues in Plane Crash,”
Ibid., March 31, 1954, p. 3; “B-36 Crash Reports and Wrecks,” Goleta
Air and Space Museum website accessed August 2009 (
www.air-and-space.com/peacemkr.htm); “Convair B-36B,” “Convair
B-36D,” “Convair B-36J Peacemaker,” National Museum of the U.S. Air
Force website accessed August 2009 (http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=2539);
“Military: Fairchild AFB,” Global Security.Org website accessed
September 2009 (www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/fairchild.htm).
KWE Note:
This page was made possible by Daryl C. McClary and HistoryLink.org.
All credit goes to them. |