jueves, 14 de febrero de 2019

Coast Guard Air Station Cape Cod holds memorial for crew of Aircraft 1432

Coast Guard Auxiliarist Chaplain Buddy Washburn reads the invocation for the 40th anniversary memorial for the crew of Aircraft 1432 in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2019. The crew of HH-3F Pelican 1432 gave the ultimate sacrifice during a medevac case when the aircraft lost power and crashed into the sea. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Nicole J. Groll)

BOSTON​ — The crew of Air Station Cape Cod held a 40th anniversary memorial​ service Wednesday for the crew of Aircraft 1432 who gave the ultimate sacrifice on Feb. 18, 1979.

Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Jim Stiles, Royal Canadian Air Force Captain George Burge, Petty Officer 2nd Class John Tait, Petty Officer 2nd Class Bruce Kaehler and Petty Officer 2nd Class Mark Torr launched 40 years ago to rescue a fisherman from the Japanese fishing boatKaisei Maru. The weather was severe: winds in excess of 30 knots, seas over 20 ft., and reduced visibility from snow. This was the third attempt to​ medevac the crew member, the other​ attempts proving unsuccessful due to weather conditions and not knowing the exact position of the fishing boat. At 5 a.m., the boat was located and the rescue basket lowered. During the rescue, the HH-3F Pelican experienced a sudden loss of power and fell into the turbulent seas, claiming four out of the five lives. Torr was the sole survivor.​

The crew of Air Station Cape Cod, family, friends, and past shipmates gathered to honor the memory of this​ fatal accident, where four crew members gave their lives.

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