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Charles F. Blair Jr.

Charles F. Blair Jr. (July 19, 1909 – September 2, 1978) was an American aviation pioneer who helped work out the routes and navigation techniques necessary for long-distance flights. He served as a reserve officer, early in his career for the United States Navy, reaching the rank of captain, and later for the United States Air Force, reaching the rank of brigadier general. He died in a transportation accident in the Caribbean while captaining a Grumman Goose seaplane for his airline, Antilles Air Boats.

Charles F. Blair Jr.
Born(1909-07-19)July 19, 1909
Buffalo, New York, U.S.
DiedSeptember 2, 1978(1978-09-02) (aged 69)
St. Thomas, Virgin Islands
Place of burial
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
 United States Air Force
Years of service1932–1960
Rank Captain (USN)
Brigadier general (USAF)
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsHarmon Trophy
Spouse(s)4, including Maureen O'Hara
Other workPan American World Airways
Antilles Air Boats

Life and career edit

Blair was born in Buffalo, New York. He learned to fly in San Diego and made his first solo flight at the age of 19.[1] In 1931, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Vermont, and the following year was commissioned an Ensign as a naval aviator and served in the Naval Reserve, attaining the rank of Lieutenant while serving a tour as a fighter pilot.[1] He remained in the Naval Reserve in the prewar years while taking jobs as a pilot. He flew for Boeing Air Transport and stayed with Boeing for seven years.[1] In 1940, Blair became a chief pilot at American Export Airlines, later renamed American Overseas Airlines, where he trained the pilots.[1]

When America entered World War II, Blair was called into active duty and flew with the Naval Air Transport Service, reaching the rank of captain. He also did work with the Air Transport Command, as well as serving as a test pilot for Grumman Aircraft. With the Naval Transport Service he flew flying boats across the Atlantic to Foynes, Ireland. On one return trip, flying the Sikorsky VS-44, he passed up his refueling station on Newfoundland and continued on to New York. Arriving there after 25 hours and 45 minutes in the air, he was the first to carry passengers and mail on a non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean in a flying boat, long after a number of dirigibles.[1] As a Grumman test pilot he worked on projects that became the Grumman F6F Hellcat, Grumman F7F Tigercat, Grumman F8F Bearcat and the Martin Mars flying boat.

 
Cap. C. Blair's Mustang being refueled at Bardufoss Airport before taking off on the flight from Bardufoss to Fairbanks.

Following the war, Blair was placed in charge of flight testing the Lockheed Constellation and the Boeing Stratocruiser airliners for American Overseas Airlines, and he oversaw their introduction on the new transatlantic routes. While working for American he started his own small transport service, flying personnel and material on special request flights to areas in need. He called the air service Associated Air Transport, Inc. In 1950 American Overseas Airlines merged with Pan American World Airways. Blair was hired on as a Chief Pilot at Pan Am.

 
Charles Blair's Excalibur III on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center (NASM)

In 1950 Pan American World Airways purchased a P-51 Mustang to allow Blair a chance to attempt a new long-distance record. A P-51C equipped with long-range internal fuel tanks, the aircraft had been flown by Paul Mantz, winning the transcontinental Bendix Trophy air races in 1946 and 1947, and finishing second in 1948 and third in 1949.[2] Rechristening the plane "Stormy Petrel" and then "Excalibur III", Blair began setting records. On January 31, 1951, Blair flew nonstop from New York to London to test the jet stream, traveling 3,478 miles (5,597 km) at an average speed of 446 miles per hour (718 km/h) in seven hours and 48 minutes, setting a record for a piston engine plane. On May 29 of the same year he flew from Bardufoss, Norway, to Fairbanks, Alaska, flying 3260 nonstop miles across the North Pole.[3] Captain Blair was awarded the Harmon Trophy from President Truman.[4] That same year he was also awarded the Gold Medal of the Norwegian Aero Club.[citation needed] The Excalibur III is now on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center.[5]

Blair resigned his naval commission in 1952. Attracted by his pioneering work in long-range flights, the Air Force invited him to act as a consultant. In April 1953 he accepted a commission in the Air Force Reserve with the rank of colonel. For the next 15 years he split his time flying between Pan Am and the Air Force. In 1956 Blair led three F-84s in a flight across the Atlantic Ocean, using in-air refueling.[1] In 1959 he was promoted to brigadier general. Two weeks after his promotion he led a flight of two F-100 Super Sabres in a nonstop flight from England to Alaska, routing the flight over the North Pole. Blair was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for this achievement.

Brigadier General Blair became a consultant to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in 1962.[citation needed] In 1963 he founded Antilles Air Boats, which provided transport between St Thomas and St Croix in the US Virgin Islands as well as San Juan, Puerto Rico.[3][6] Six years later he retired from Pan Am. He slowly built Antilles Air Boats up until it operated 27 aircraft, all propeller-driven flying boats from the war years which were well suited to the short hops over water the airline specialized in. In 1974 Blair purchased two Sandringham flying boats from Ansett Airlines that had serviced the Sydney-to-Lord Howe Island route. In 1967 he also acquired the last Sikorsky VS-44 "Excambian" that Antilles operated until it was damaged in 1969.[citation needed]

He co-wrote a novel with A.J Wallis in 1956, Thunder Above, which was filmed as Beyond the Curtain. In 1960 he published Red Ball in the Sky, an autobiography highlighting his adventures in flight.[3] It was expanded and re-published min 1952, 1957, 1969 and in 1970.

Personal life edit

Blair was married 4 times.

After joining the U.S. Navy, then Ensign Blair married Janice Evelyn Davis in Wallingford, Vermont on September 6, 1932. They had two children, Suzanne (b 1934), and Christopher Noel (b 1950). They would later divorce. [7]

Blair's second marriage from 1953 to 1965 was to Mae E. Gallmoyer (born 1924) commonly known as Flip Blair who lives in Farmington, Connecticut. She was born in Topton, Pennsylvania, enrolled in active duty as a WAVE in the U.S. Navy during World War II and later served as a stewardess for Arabian American Oil Company, American Airlines, and Pan American World Airways. She was an extensive traveler visiting many countries throughout the world including China shortly after the country opened tourism to U.S. citizens. Later in her career she worked as a travel agent arranging trips for many prominent people and held positions at Lindblad Travel and Tauck Tours. The marriage produced two children, Charles Lee, a physician, and Stephen Wallace, a composer, jazz guitarist and professor of music.

On March 11, 1968, Charles Blair was married for the fourth time, to the actress Maureen O'Hara, whom he had first met on a flight to Ireland in 1947.[8]

Blair's brother Robert Noel Blair (1912–2003), was a painter and art teacher, in Buffalo, NY, noted for his Battle of the Bulge paintings, executed during combat. His sister-in-law Jeannette Blair and nephew Bruce Blair are also painters in the Buffalo area.

Death edit

 
A Grumman G-21 similar to the one Blair was flying on the day of his accident

On September 2, 1978, Blair was piloting a Grumman G21 "Goose" on Antilles Air Boats Flight 941, a routine passenger flight traveling north from St. Croix to St. Thomas.[9] The sole pilot, Blair was carrying 10 passengers, including a 13-year-old boy who was seated next to Blair in the co-pilot's seat. Near the end of the short flight the port engine suffered catastrophic failure. The piston of the No. 5 cylinder broke, causing the cylinder to break loose from its mounting. The cylinder struck the engine cowling, breaking it off its mountings on the port nacelle. Blair was five miles out from St Thomas, flying at 1,700 feet. He immediately feathered his port propeller and shut down the engine, while adding power to the starboard in an attempt to maintain level flight. The plane should have been able to maintain its altitude on one engine, but in the event the aircraft began losing height. Blair notified the St. Thomas tower that he had lost an engine, and that he would need assistance. When the tower responded Blair said he would land in the protected waters of the West Gregerie Channel, and he requested a boat to pick up his passengers. Overhearing the calls, a second Antilles Air Boats aircraft that happened to be in the vicinity approached from above and gained visual contact. The sea was rough, with a 15- to 20-knot wind from the southeast generating whitecaps and swells of 5 to 6 feet.[9]

Blair was unable to maintain level flight on the single functioning engine and was losing 300 to 400 feet of altitude a minute. There were two main reasons for this: the propeller mounted to the starboard engine had suffered from pitting and corrosion. The maintenance crew had resurfaced it to remove the defects, but the aerodynamic shape of the propeller had not been maintained. In addition, the separated cowling on the port side caused a marked increase in drag.[9]

Though losing altitude, Blair believed he could still fly the plane. He anticipated gaining extra lift from the ground effect off the water once he got down on the deck. Among the pilots at Antilles Air Boats the broadly held belief was if they were limited to one engine they would not go down, as they could use ground effect to stay aloft. Their collective faith in this concept was documented in the company's papers.[9] Though real, the added lift of ground effect is less robust if the surface is irregular.

Blair did not give emergency instructions to the passengers nor did he tell them to prepare for a water landing. It appeared he had rejected this idea and set his sights on getting the aircraft closer to shore.[9] He never turned the plane into the wind. He never reduced power nor lowered flaps. The wind coming from the southeast provided a considerable tailwind to Blair's aircraft, increasing his speed relative to the surface of the water. Blair focused on keeping the aircraft in the air. It soon proved he was unable to do so. The plane contacted the chopped conditions of the ocean's surface at a high speed, with the starboard wing low. Bounding off the first contact, it traveled 3 or 4 plane lengths in the air and then came back down. When it did the float on the port wing buried itself in the water. The plane cartwheeled around it and into the ocean, breaking apart and settling upside down in the water. It sank in a matter of minutes. No one was killed from the impact of the crash, but Blair and three of his passengers drowned. The aircraft settled to the bottom in 85 feet of water. Surviving passengers were soon picked up by local boats. One passenger suffered a compression fracture to his first lumbar vertebra. All the rest suffered minor cuts and bruises.[9]

NTSB findings in the investigation of the accident edit

After its investigation, the NTSB concluded that pre-flight planning was improper because the maintenance release was falsified by a licensed mechanic. The mechanic had certified the aircraft as airworthy when, in fact, it was not. The plane was flown 22 hrs beyond the scheduled inspection time with the knowledge of certain key managers, supervisors, and licensed personnel.

The total times in the aircraft logbook had been falsified with the full knowledge of management, supervisors, and licensed personnel. Company policy and decisions were made by Blair, who violated or condoned violation of the regulations in the interest of company objectives.

The left engine failed when the No. 5 cylinder and piston separated from the engine, causing the engine cowl to separate. That engine was not airworthy because it had been in storage for 10 years before it was installed on the accident plane. The added drag caused by the loss of the cowling, combined with the decreased efficiency of the improperly maintained right propeller, combined with the over-weight condition of the aircraft—which resulted from a deficient FAA supplemental type certificate—made it impossible to maintain level single-engine flight.

"The probable cause of the accident was the inability of the aircraft to sustain single-engine flight and the captain's decision to attempt to fly the aircraft in ground effect [which was not an approved procedure] rather than attempt an open sea emergency landing."

"Contributing to the accident were the company's inadequate maintenance program, the management influence which resulted in the disregard of Federal Aviation Regulations and FAA-approved company maintenance policies, inadequate FAA surveillance of the airline, and deficient enforcement procedures."

"Contributing to the fatalities in this survivable accident was the captain's failure to brief passengers properly on emergency procedures."

After the engine failed, the captain did not warn or brief the passengers concerning life vests, emergency exits, or the developing situation. Consequently, no passengers made use of the life vests stored under each seat. Additionally, the captain failed to extend the flaps and failed to turn the plane into the wind. Those failures resulted in the plane impacting the ocean with almost twice the kinetic energy that would have been otherwise generated, causing the plane to break up and rapidly sink.[9]

Legacy edit

Blair flew flying boats into Foynes, Ireland from 1942 to 1945. Foynes' sheltered inlet made for a good operation area for flying boats, and it was the last port of call on Ireland's western shore. As a result, Foynes became one of the biggest civilian airports in Europe during World War II. Blair was the first pilot to make the transatlantic flight from the U.S. to Foynes carrying passengers and mail.[10] On July 8, 1989, his widow, Maureen O'Hara, cut the opening ceremony ribbon for the Foynes Flying Boat and Maritime Museum. She also presided over the Grand Reopening and Expansion of the Flying Boats Museum in 2006. O'Hara had been asked to be the museum's patron. She accepted, and served in this capacity from its opening until her death in 2015.[11]

O'Hara donated her late husband's flying boat (Sikorsky VS-44A) "The Queen of the Skies" to the National Museum of Naval Aviation and it was subsequently given on permanent loan to the New England Air Museum in Connecticut.[12]

A reproduction of Blair's red P-51 used to be displayed on the roof of the Queen's Building at Heathrow airport.[13]

Blair's Sandringham Flying boat VP-LVE "Southern Cross" has been the center piece of the Southampton Hall of Aviation since 1984. The plane has been restored to appear as it did for Ansett Flying Boat Services, with registration number VH-BRC and the name "Beachcomber".[14]

The Seaplane terminal located at The Charlotte Amalie Harbor Seaplane Base was dedicated in his honor.

Blair and Maureen O'Hara are buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Gandt, Robert (November 1980). "The Legend of Charlie Blair". Air Line Pilot.
  2. ^ "44-10947 N1202 "Excalibur III"". The North American P-51 Mustang. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Whipple, Sid (July 13, 1969). "Star Brightens Husband's Retirement Flight". Stars and Stripes. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  4. ^ Airline Pilot Wins Top Harmon Prize; Capt. C. F. Blair Jr. Is Named 'Outstanding Aviator' – Award to Mme. Auriol, The New York Times, July 5, 1952
  5. ^ "North American P-51C, "Excalibur III"". Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
  6. ^ Levine, Barry (October 1978). "Charlie Blair's One-Man Airline". Free Enterprise.
  7. ^ Swopes, Brian (2019). "Tag Archives: Charles Francis Blair Jr". This Day in Aviation. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
  8. ^ "CNN Transcript". CNN.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g "Aviation Accident Report AAR-79-09 (id DCA78AA021)". National Transportation Safety Board. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
  10. ^ "Foynes Flying Boat Museum". Foynes Flying Boat and Maritime Museum. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  11. ^ "Maureen O'Hara". Foynes Flying Boat and Maritime Museum. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  12. ^ "Sikorsky VS-44A 'Excambian'". New England Air Museum. New England Air Museum. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  13. ^ "Flying Magazine". May 1996.
  14. ^ "Solent Sky Museum". Retrieved September 23, 2019.
  15. ^ Burial Detail: Blair, Charles F – ANC Explorer

Bibliography edit

  • Wickstead, Maurice (2017). "A Sky Full of Frontiers: Charles F. Blair - A Life in Aviation". The Aviation Historian (20): 98–108. ISSN 2051-1930.

charles, blair, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Charles F Blair Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles F Blair Jr July 19 1909 September 2 1978 was an American aviation pioneer who helped work out the routes and navigation techniques necessary for long distance flights He served as a reserve officer early in his career for the United States Navy reaching the rank of captain and later for the United States Air Force reaching the rank of brigadier general He died in a transportation accident in the Caribbean while captaining a Grumman Goose seaplane for his airline Antilles Air Boats Charles F Blair Jr Born 1909 07 19 July 19 1909Buffalo New York U S DiedSeptember 2 1978 1978 09 02 aged 69 St Thomas Virgin IslandsPlace of burialArlington National CemeteryAllegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States Navy United States Air ForceYears of service1932 1960RankCaptain USN Brigadier general USAF Battles warsWorld War IIAwardsHarmon TrophySpouse s 4 including Maureen O HaraOther workPan American World Airways Antilles Air Boats Contents 1 Life and career 2 Personal life 3 Death 3 1 NTSB findings in the investigation of the accident 4 Legacy 5 References 6 BibliographyLife and career editBlair was born in Buffalo New York He learned to fly in San Diego and made his first solo flight at the age of 19 1 In 1931 he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Vermont and the following year was commissioned an Ensign as a naval aviator and served in the Naval Reserve attaining the rank of Lieutenant while serving a tour as a fighter pilot 1 He remained in the Naval Reserve in the prewar years while taking jobs as a pilot He flew for Boeing Air Transport and stayed with Boeing for seven years 1 In 1940 Blair became a chief pilot at American Export Airlines later renamed American Overseas Airlines where he trained the pilots 1 When America entered World War II Blair was called into active duty and flew with the Naval Air Transport Service reaching the rank of captain He also did work with the Air Transport Command as well as serving as a test pilot for Grumman Aircraft With the Naval Transport Service he flew flying boats across the Atlantic to Foynes Ireland On one return trip flying the Sikorsky VS 44 he passed up his refueling station on Newfoundland and continued on to New York Arriving there after 25 hours and 45 minutes in the air he was the first to carry passengers and mail on a non stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean in a flying boat long after a number of dirigibles 1 As a Grumman test pilot he worked on projects that became the Grumman F6F Hellcat Grumman F7F Tigercat Grumman F8F Bearcat and the Martin Mars flying boat nbsp Cap C Blair s Mustang being refueled at Bardufoss Airport before taking off on the flight from Bardufoss to Fairbanks Following the war Blair was placed in charge of flight testing the Lockheed Constellation and the Boeing Stratocruiser airliners for American Overseas Airlines and he oversaw their introduction on the new transatlantic routes While working for American he started his own small transport service flying personnel and material on special request flights to areas in need He called the air service Associated Air Transport Inc In 1950 American Overseas Airlines merged with Pan American World Airways Blair was hired on as a Chief Pilot at Pan Am nbsp Charles Blair s Excalibur III on display at the Steven F Udvar Hazy Center NASM In 1950 Pan American World Airways purchased a P 51 Mustang to allow Blair a chance to attempt a new long distance record A P 51C equipped with long range internal fuel tanks the aircraft had been flown by Paul Mantz winning the transcontinental Bendix Trophy air races in 1946 and 1947 and finishing second in 1948 and third in 1949 2 Rechristening the plane Stormy Petrel and then Excalibur III Blair began setting records On January 31 1951 Blair flew nonstop from New York to London to test the jet stream traveling 3 478 miles 5 597 km at an average speed of 446 miles per hour 718 km h in seven hours and 48 minutes setting a record for a piston engine plane On May 29 of the same year he flew from Bardufoss Norway to Fairbanks Alaska flying 3260 nonstop miles across the North Pole 3 Captain Blair was awarded the Harmon Trophy from President Truman 4 That same year he was also awarded the Gold Medal of the Norwegian Aero Club citation needed The Excalibur III is now on display at the Steven F Udvar Hazy Center 5 Blair resigned his naval commission in 1952 Attracted by his pioneering work in long range flights the Air Force invited him to act as a consultant In April 1953 he accepted a commission in the Air Force Reserve with the rank of colonel For the next 15 years he split his time flying between Pan Am and the Air Force In 1956 Blair led three F 84s in a flight across the Atlantic Ocean using in air refueling 1 In 1959 he was promoted to brigadier general Two weeks after his promotion he led a flight of two F 100 Super Sabres in a nonstop flight from England to Alaska routing the flight over the North Pole Blair was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for this achievement Brigadier General Blair became a consultant to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in 1962 citation needed In 1963 he founded Antilles Air Boats which provided transport between St Thomas and St Croix in the US Virgin Islands as well as San Juan Puerto Rico 3 6 Six years later he retired from Pan Am He slowly built Antilles Air Boats up until it operated 27 aircraft all propeller driven flying boats from the war years which were well suited to the short hops over water the airline specialized in In 1974 Blair purchased two Sandringham flying boats from Ansett Airlines that had serviced the Sydney to Lord Howe Island route In 1967 he also acquired the last Sikorsky VS 44 Excambian that Antilles operated until it was damaged in 1969 citation needed He co wrote a novel with A J Wallis in 1956 Thunder Above which was filmed as Beyond the Curtain In 1960 he published Red Ball in the Sky an autobiography highlighting his adventures in flight 3 It was expanded and re published min 1952 1957 1969 and in 1970 Personal life editBlair was married 4 times After joining the U S Navy then Ensign Blair married Janice Evelyn Davis in Wallingford Vermont on September 6 1932 They had two children Suzanne b 1934 and Christopher Noel b 1950 They would later divorce 7 Blair s second marriage from 1953 to 1965 was to Mae E Gallmoyer born 1924 commonly known as Flip Blair who lives in Farmington Connecticut She was born in Topton Pennsylvania enrolled in active duty as a WAVE in the U S Navy during World War II and later served as a stewardess for Arabian American Oil Company American Airlines and Pan American World Airways She was an extensive traveler visiting many countries throughout the world including China shortly after the country opened tourism to U S citizens Later in her career she worked as a travel agent arranging trips for many prominent people and held positions at Lindblad Travel and Tauck Tours The marriage produced two children Charles Lee a physician and Stephen Wallace a composer jazz guitarist and professor of music On March 11 1968 Charles Blair was married for the fourth time to the actress Maureen O Hara whom he had first met on a flight to Ireland in 1947 8 Blair s brother Robert Noel Blair 1912 2003 was a painter and art teacher in Buffalo NY noted for his Battle of the Bulge paintings executed during combat His sister in law Jeannette Blair and nephew Bruce Blair are also painters in the Buffalo area Death edit nbsp A Grumman G 21 similar to the one Blair was flying on the day of his accident On September 2 1978 Blair was piloting a Grumman G21 Goose on Antilles Air Boats Flight 941 a routine passenger flight traveling north from St Croix to St Thomas 9 The sole pilot Blair was carrying 10 passengers including a 13 year old boy who was seated next to Blair in the co pilot s seat Near the end of the short flight the port engine suffered catastrophic failure The piston of the No 5 cylinder broke causing the cylinder to break loose from its mounting The cylinder struck the engine cowling breaking it off its mountings on the port nacelle Blair was five miles out from St Thomas flying at 1 700 feet He immediately feathered his port propeller and shut down the engine while adding power to the starboard in an attempt to maintain level flight The plane should have been able to maintain its altitude on one engine but in the event the aircraft began losing height Blair notified the St Thomas tower that he had lost an engine and that he would need assistance When the tower responded Blair said he would land in the protected waters of the West Gregerie Channel and he requested a boat to pick up his passengers Overhearing the calls a second Antilles Air Boats aircraft that happened to be in the vicinity approached from above and gained visual contact The sea was rough with a 15 to 20 knot wind from the southeast generating whitecaps and swells of 5 to 6 feet 9 Blair was unable to maintain level flight on the single functioning engine and was losing 300 to 400 feet of altitude a minute There were two main reasons for this the propeller mounted to the starboard engine had suffered from pitting and corrosion The maintenance crew had resurfaced it to remove the defects but the aerodynamic shape of the propeller had not been maintained In addition the separated cowling on the port side caused a marked increase in drag 9 Though losing altitude Blair believed he could still fly the plane He anticipated gaining extra lift from the ground effect off the water once he got down on the deck Among the pilots at Antilles Air Boats the broadly held belief was if they were limited to one engine they would not go down as they could use ground effect to stay aloft Their collective faith in this concept was documented in the company s papers 9 Though real the added lift of ground effect is less robust if the surface is irregular Blair did not give emergency instructions to the passengers nor did he tell them to prepare for a water landing It appeared he had rejected this idea and set his sights on getting the aircraft closer to shore 9 He never turned the plane into the wind He never reduced power nor lowered flaps The wind coming from the southeast provided a considerable tailwind to Blair s aircraft increasing his speed relative to the surface of the water Blair focused on keeping the aircraft in the air It soon proved he was unable to do so The plane contacted the chopped conditions of the ocean s surface at a high speed with the starboard wing low Bounding off the first contact it traveled 3 or 4 plane lengths in the air and then came back down When it did the float on the port wing buried itself in the water The plane cartwheeled around it and into the ocean breaking apart and settling upside down in the water It sank in a matter of minutes No one was killed from the impact of the crash but Blair and three of his passengers drowned The aircraft settled to the bottom in 85 feet of water Surviving passengers were soon picked up by local boats One passenger suffered a compression fracture to his first lumbar vertebra All the rest suffered minor cuts and bruises 9 NTSB findings in the investigation of the accident edit After its investigation the NTSB concluded that pre flight planning was improper because the maintenance release was falsified by a licensed mechanic The mechanic had certified the aircraft as airworthy when in fact it was not The plane was flown 22 hrs beyond the scheduled inspection time with the knowledge of certain key managers supervisors and licensed personnel The total times in the aircraft logbook had been falsified with the full knowledge of management supervisors and licensed personnel Company policy and decisions were made by Blair who violated or condoned violation of the regulations in the interest of company objectives The left engine failed when the No 5 cylinder and piston separated from the engine causing the engine cowl to separate That engine was not airworthy because it had been in storage for 10 years before it was installed on the accident plane The added drag caused by the loss of the cowling combined with the decreased efficiency of the improperly maintained right propeller combined with the over weight condition of the aircraft which resulted from a deficient FAA supplemental type certificate made it impossible to maintain level single engine flight The probable cause of the accident was the inability of the aircraft to sustain single engine flight and the captain s decision to attempt to fly the aircraft in ground effect which was not an approved procedure rather than attempt an open sea emergency landing Contributing to the accident were the company s inadequate maintenance program the management influence which resulted in the disregard of Federal Aviation Regulations and FAA approved company maintenance policies inadequate FAA surveillance of the airline and deficient enforcement procedures Contributing to the fatalities in this survivable accident was the captain s failure to brief passengers properly on emergency procedures After the engine failed the captain did not warn or brief the passengers concerning life vests emergency exits or the developing situation Consequently no passengers made use of the life vests stored under each seat Additionally the captain failed to extend the flaps and failed to turn the plane into the wind Those failures resulted in the plane impacting the ocean with almost twice the kinetic energy that would have been otherwise generated causing the plane to break up and rapidly sink 9 Legacy editBlair flew flying boats into Foynes Ireland from 1942 to 1945 Foynes sheltered inlet made for a good operation area for flying boats and it was the last port of call on Ireland s western shore As a result Foynes became one of the biggest civilian airports in Europe during World War II Blair was the first pilot to make the transatlantic flight from the U S to Foynes carrying passengers and mail 10 On July 8 1989 his widow Maureen O Hara cut the opening ceremony ribbon for the Foynes Flying Boat and Maritime Museum She also presided over the Grand Reopening and Expansion of the Flying Boats Museum in 2006 O Hara had been asked to be the museum s patron She accepted and served in this capacity from its opening until her death in 2015 11 O Hara donated her late husband s flying boat Sikorsky VS 44A The Queen of the Skies to the National Museum of Naval Aviation and it was subsequently given on permanent loan to the New England Air Museum in Connecticut 12 A reproduction of Blair s red P 51 used to be displayed on the roof of the Queen s Building at Heathrow airport 13 Blair s Sandringham Flying boat VP LVE Southern Cross has been the center piece of the Southampton Hall of Aviation since 1984 The plane has been restored to appear as it did for Ansett Flying Boat Services with registration number VH BRC and the name Beachcomber 14 The Seaplane terminal located at The Charlotte Amalie Harbor Seaplane Base was dedicated in his honor Blair and Maureen O Hara are buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington Virginia 15 References edit a b c d e f Gandt Robert November 1980 The Legend of Charlie Blair Air Line Pilot 44 10947 N1202 Excalibur III The North American P 51 Mustang Retrieved September 5 2019 a b c Whipple Sid July 13 1969 Star Brightens Husband s Retirement Flight Stars and Stripes Retrieved September 5 2019 Airline Pilot Wins Top Harmon Prize Capt C F Blair Jr Is Named Outstanding Aviator Award to Mme Auriol The New York Times July 5 1952 North American P 51C Excalibur III Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Smithsonian Institution Retrieved August 6 2018 Levine Barry October 1978 Charlie Blair s One Man Airline Free Enterprise Swopes Brian 2019 Tag Archives Charles Francis Blair Jr This Day in Aviation Retrieved May 1 2021 CNN Transcript CNN a b c d e f g Aviation Accident Report AAR 79 09 id DCA78AA021 National Transportation Safety Board Retrieved January 2 2015 Foynes Flying Boat Museum Foynes Flying Boat and Maritime Museum Retrieved September 5 2019 Maureen O Hara Foynes Flying Boat and Maritime Museum Retrieved September 5 2019 Sikorsky VS 44A Excambian New England Air Museum New England Air Museum Retrieved January 11 2023 Flying Magazine May 1996 Solent Sky Museum Retrieved September 23 2019 Burial Detail Blair Charles F ANC ExplorerBibliography editWickstead Maurice 2017 A Sky Full of Frontiers Charles F Blair A Life in Aviation The Aviation Historian 20 98 108 ISSN 2051 1930 nbsp Biography portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles F Blair Jr amp oldid 1218510770, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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