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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, June 20, 2009

'Pristine' WWII aircraft lifted from Lake Michigan


By Katie Urbaszewski
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Mia Cook danced with the Aloha Chicago Halau yesterday as a World War II dive bomber was recovered from Lake Michigan.

Photos by John Frangoulis

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

After two days of preparation, a Douglas SBD Dauntless that served in Hawai'i during World War II was lifted yesterday from Lake Michigan. The plane will be placed in the Pacific Aviation Museum at Pearl Harbor in a few years.

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The Pacific Aviation Museum at Pearl Harbor currently displays a full-size fiberglass model of a type of dive bomber that played a crucial role in World War II. Now that museum officials helped bring about the recovery of one of those historic planes from the bottom of Lake Michigan, the model will be replaced with the real thing.

A Douglas SBD Dauntless, one of several types of aircraft the U.S. Navy used to defeat the Japanese navy at the Battle of Midway, was raised yesterday from a depth of 300 feet where it had lain for 65 years. The museum's executive director, Ken DeHoff, flew to Waukegan, Ill., to observe the retrieval, an operation that took about a year to plan.

When the plane broke the surface of the water, everyone present was "ecstatic," DeHoff said.

"People were so excited to see how well it was intact."

The lake's conditions — a combination of cold water and lack of sunlight — are excellent for preserving aircraft wrecks, and officials were aware even before they lifted it that the Dauntless would be in "pristine" condition, DeHoff said.

Once the plane was on land, it quickly became clear what good condition it was in. The structure of the body, wings and tail were undamaged, much of the underside's blue paint remained and only one wheel had fallen off.

"There was still gasoline in the tank," DeHoff said.

Still, it will take the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Fla., about three years to dissemble and clean each part of the plane, and DeHoff doesn't expect it to arrive in Hawai'i until 2012.

PLANE SERVED IN HONOLULU

An estimated 300 military airplanes went to the bottom of Lake Michigan during World War II in training accidents and mechanical malfunctions, according to the national museum. The U.S. Navy's underwater aircraft recovery program has recovered 39 of them since 1990.

The Dauntless bound for Hawai'i, No. 2173, served in Honolulu in 1942, flew off the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise and was later used for carrier qualifications out of Chicago's Navy Pier and Glenview Naval Air Station, DeHoff said.

The carburetor iced up in 1944, resulting in a belly-landing in the lake. Pilot John Lendo survived, DeHoff said.

The plane had been resting nosedown at a 45-degree angle at the bottom of the lake ever since, he said.

Chicago-based A&T Recovery, which helped the Navy recover most of the 39 World War II planes retrieved from Lake Michigan, began to slowly raise the Dauntless two days before the recovery to ensure that it wouldn't be damaged by the lift.

Crews attached air balloons to the plane underwater and let it rise naturally, and a crane retrieved the aircraft in the final stage of the recovery yesterday morning.

ARRIVAL GREETED WITH HULA

Hula dancers and a kahu's blessing greeted the Dauntless as the crane pulled it to the surface.

Taras Lyssenko of A&T Recovery was surprised not only by the plane's condition — better than most of the 36 planes the company has recovered from the lake — but also by the ceremony.

"Nobody ever does that," he said, explaining that people hardly ever celebrate the raising of a plane at all, let alone with hula dancers.

Between paperwork the Navy required and collaboration with the National Naval Aviation Museum, the planning took about a year, DeHoff said.

It was worth it, he said, not only for the museum, but for Hawai'i as well.

"Every time we bring an aircraft to Hawai'i that flew out of Hawai'i, we're bringing back a piece of history," he said. "We always have people come back to say, 'I worked on that airplane.'"