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Suspending a two-and-a-half ton Sikorsky HH-52Seaguard helicopter from the ceiling of the
Smithsonian Air & Space museum is without a doubt, a difficult job. Nevertheless, the story behind
the museums newest exhibit is so fraught with drama, that many guests attending the April 14
unveiling might say that hanging the chopper was the easiest part bringing to a close a decade-long
effort to have a Coast Guard aircraft on display at the Nations air museum.
The story began when members of the Coast Guard Aviation Association set out to secure for the Air
& Space Museum, the plane they believed to be most representative of the branchs life-saving
mission. The undisputed selection was the 13 seat amphibious HH-52 also known as the S-62. Ninety
nine of them were purchased for the Coast Guard in the sixties and they were used well into the
eighties.
The association was self-funded but well connected in military circles. When members learned that
three of the big choppers were being used for target practice at the Armys Aberdeen Proving
Grounds in Maryland, calls were made and the lifesaving helicopters were themselves rescued, and
brought to a Coast Guard base in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. The original plan was for retired
military mechanics to do the restoration work, according to Mont Smith, a member of the
association and former Coast Guard HH-52 pilot.
We dubbed them the Aberdeen Girls, Smith told me of the three helicopters that arrived from
Maryland, but they were anything but youthful. They were tired, having sat in the undergrowth with
weeds and bushes growing out of them. Dismayed by their condition, members of the association
jumped at the chance to pick up a previously unknown survivor of the original fleet of Seaguards
that was up for auction on eBay.
But the fourth was not in much better than the first three, none were deemed to have sufficient
structural integrity to be restored to Smithsonian standards, Smith said.
Many visitors to the National Air &Space Museum think of it as a place to see all kinds of aircraft
significant in history. But to the curators, the exhibits are more than that. They are artifacts, each
one of which documents a unique story, curator Russ Lee wrote in an article for the museums blog.
And this is the backstory to the whatyoull read about in the papers on Thursday when, in the
cavernous Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, the first Coast Guard aircraft finally takes its
rightful place in the Smithsonian.
Its a dream come true, Smith said, The Coast Guard deserves this recognition in the
100thanniversary of Coast Guard Aviation. But it is not the only backstory. The other, involves a
particularly poignant life saving mission by this particular aircraft
On November 1,1979, pilots J.C. Cobb and Chris Kilgore and flight mechanic, Tom Wynn were
rousted from their beds before dawn to fly to a collision of a freighter and a fully loaded oil tanker in
Port of Houston. In an interview with the Washington Post, Kilgore, now 67 remembered the scene
as the helicopter approached. There was a sea of fire around it, so its got a fire footprint much
larger than the tanker itself.
Thirty one sailors died in the accident and subsequent explosion. But as the aircraft worked in the
billowing smoke and leaping flames, the crew was able to rescue 26 men from one ship and 6 from
the tanker, ferrying them in repeated flights between the accident scene and an nearby oil rig.
The Coasties involved in the mission will also be on hand in Virginia when that lifesaving helicopter
goes on display.
Air museums house so much more than the airplanes before us, they are the temples of the
inanimate that open our eyes so that we can see what humans are capable of.
The post Coast Guard Plane to Join Aviation Greats at Air & Space Museum appeared first on
Christine Negroni.