May 16, 1944 – six war planes out of Brunswick Naval Air Station were buzzing in
the late morning sky over Sebago Lake. Residents in the region were accustomed
to the protracted drone of British Corsair fighter planes, destined for the
Pacific war theater, breaking the early day stillness as they engaged in
frenetic training exercises.
A
North Sebago woman was watching when two of the aircraft dived low. She later
told the Portland
Boaters
from Long Beach searched the crash area but found no trace of the planes or the
occupants. Killed, and to this day listed as missing in action, were two young
Royal Navy pilots, sub-lieutenants Vaughan Reginald Gill and Raymond L. Knott,
both 19. They are memorialized in their home town of Lee-on-Solent in
Hampshire, England.
Military
investigators sent amphibian planes, Marines and Navy men to the site and used
a Navy diving bell in a recovery effort but found only an antenna and a
headrest. Few other details were released. Speculation centered on either the
two gull-winged planes got too close to each other or too close to the water.
Press reports over the years have favored the collision theory. Both aircraft
remain submerged about 300 feet down in Sebago Lake.
Sadly,
air crash fatalities in Maine during training missions, especially low-level combat
training were not rare during the second world war. One-hundred thirty-two
mishaps involving Corsair fighter planes were recorded in Maine in 1944 alone.
“We
probably had a crash every two or three days (in the state) during the war,”
said BNAS spokesman, John James in a Bangor Dailey News story in 1998.
Peter
Noddin, custodian of Aviation Archaeology in Maine, a website devoted to the
memory of Maine’s military crash victims, reports 805 military aviation
accidents in Maine between 1919 and 1989. More than half, he says, happened
during World War II with a total of 143 fatalities.
Noddin maintains that the logistics of
gearing up for war must be understood from a 1940s perspective.
“The
war was waged with great urgency…the army didn’t have the luxury of elite
flight-training programs, testing protocols or the patience for ideal flying
conditions. Thousands of airmen, many with no greater qualification than a high
school diploma, were rushed through training. Mass-produced planes were
delivered as quickly as they were riveted together.”
From the video footage of the fuselage code |
In
recent years, well publicized efforts by various entities such as aircraft
restoration groups, wreck hunters and “war bird” collectors have expressed
interest in locating and even salvaging the Sebago Corsairs. In 2003, using
historic eyewitness accounts and modern side-scan sonar equipment, one of the
two aircraft was located in one of the deepest parts of Sebago’s main lake.
Footage produced by remote controlled video documented the fuselage code (3BH)
and the serial number and fin flash on the tail. The aircraft was shown to be resting
nose-down by the weight of the engine. The wings were torn off – one was
located approximately 100 feet off to the side. The landing gear was down and
the canopy open. Clothing and a tangle of parachute shroud line appear to drift
upward from the forward cockpit.
The
second Corsair is thought to be resting less than a mile from the “3BH” plane.
Controversy
surrounds release of the video footage, as well as the legality and the moral
and ethical considerations in any attempt to retrieve the wreckage. Many
suggest the remains of the dead pilots are still with, or near, the submerged
aircraft.
A proposed salvage operation was foiled in a
federal court when a judge dismissed a suit brought by a recovery firm that
sought to recover the Corsairs. The company had argued the “admiralty law”
(laws of salvage and finds) applied to their retrieval plans. The court,
however, ruled that Sebago Lake is considered a “great pond,” and does not fall
under the jurisdiction of federal navigable waters. During deliberations, the
State of Maine and Great Britain maintained that the warplanes are grave sites
and shouldn’t be disturbed.
Feelings on both sides run deep, as
evidenced by testimony on an aviation forum website (Key.Aero Network). Noddin, writing in favor of recovery, writes “Why
has this not been recovered, and the man given a proper burial?” Jayce (from
Key.Aero Network) admits to mixed feelings, “On the one hand, recovery and a
proper burial can only be a good thing. But personally, I feel strongly there
is something morally repugnant about recovering an air frame simply for
commercial purposes.”
For the full
historical record of the crash of two British Navy Corsairs over Sebago Lake,
read “Finding the Fallen” by Andy Saunders.
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