Mon May 16, 2016 2:39 pm
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2. Frank Erickson, Ford Island Lt. Frank Erickson was assigned to Coast Guard Cutter Taney as the cutter’s aviation officer. Since Taney was moored in Honolulu, the Navy assigned Erickson, along with his aircraft, to Ford Island. He was the duty officer there when the first wave of the Japanese attack struck Pearl Harbor on the morning of Dec. 7, 1941. He was relieved of his watch by the commanding officer and then ran to his duty station—that of assistant operations officer and he took charge of control tower on Ford Field and of a battery of machine guns set up on the roof of the operations building. He later wrote about his experiences: Lt. Frank Erickson. U.S. Coast Guard photo. We had a grand stand view of the battle. We could see all of Ford Island and the Pearl Harbor area with the ships, the Navy Yard, Hickam, Wheeler and Eva Fields all of which were on fire. Practically all our combat planes were already lost on the ground. Most of the battleships moored along Ford Island were listing badly. The Oklahoma had already capsized. In the Pearl City channel the Utah had also disappeared from sight. The [Japanese] kept up a heavy pounding for about an hour then the bombing stopped. We had practically nothing but utility planes left to put in to the air. During this lull a few Grumman J2F and Sikorsky JRS amphibians got out to scout for the enemy. They were armed only with Springfields, shotguns, tommy guns or anything available to throw into the ships before they took off. - See more at: http://coastguard.dodlive.mil/2014/12/p ... ZVLX6.dpuf
Mon May 16, 2016 8:51 pm
Mon May 16, 2016 10:58 pm
JohnB wrote:It's neat that Mr. Sikorsky was a helicopter mechanic in the CG during the war and did development work on the hoist.
I'd imagine there were few young guys that knew more about them than he did.
BTW...At Christmas he autographed a copy of his recent book on Sikorsky history...I made contact via the Sikorsky archive. He included a nice inscription.
He's 91 now.
Tue May 17, 2016 12:52 am
Mark Allen M wrote:Terrible thread title I know. All photos are USAF photos from the Smithsonian Photo Collections (SIRIS)
One-half right front view of a badly damaged, crashed Sikorsky (VS-316A, S-48) YR-4B (YH-4B) (A/C no. 236), Zimmerman, Ohio, June 18, 1945. An unidentified group of military personnel are near the tail of the aircraft and a large group of onlookers is visible in the background.
Tue May 17, 2016 8:09 am
.Chris Brame wrote:Accident listed as a mid-air collision (but no other aircraft is listed, oddly).
Tue May 17, 2016 8:38 am
Chris Brame wrote:Mark, there's a name in quotes on the nose; can you get a higher resolution shot and zoom in so it's legible?
Tue May 17, 2016 11:28 am