Read The Man Called Brown Condor Online
Authors: Thomas E. Simmons
Coffey usually went along with John's decisions, but on this occasion, he disagreed. “We don't need to be adding a hundred pounds on this short field.”
“Well.” John said, “You can stay here and take a bus to Tuskegee. That will more than make up for the extra fuel weight.”
“Like hell, I will.” Coffey replied. “But this is how we'll do it.” He walked off the fairway into the rough, found a suitable stick, came back to the plane and paced off down the field to a point where he figured a takeoff run could be aborted and still have enough room to stop before they reached the fence. He tied his handkerchief to the stick and stuck it in the ground at the side of the fairway. Satisfied, Coffee walked back to where Robinson was finishing a pre-flight check of the biplane. This included oiling and greasing the valve rocker arms and springs by hand since the OX5 engine had no other means of lubricating these parts. This hand oiling and greasing had to be done prior to every flight. They paid four caddies fifteen cents apiece to help turn the biplane around and push it back to the base of the fairway tee. They did the same for the Buhl Pup. A small crowd of club members and caddies gathered to watch the intrepid airman. One was heard to say, “I ain't never seen no airplane crash before.”
Grover Nash got in the Buhl. John propped his engine. Nash gave the Pup full throttle. It rapidly gained speed down the smooth fairway. Robinson and Coffey watched as the small plane lifted off. It cleared the fence and cabins with no problem. Nash put the Pup in a climbing turn to circle above until John and Coffey could takeoff and join up with him.
John got in the rear cockpit. Coffey said, “Remember, if we aren't off by the time we reach my marker yonder, you cut the throttle and stop this thing.” He walked around front and propped off the engine, climbed into the front cockpit, fastened his seat belt, and signaled with a thumb up that he was ready.
John gave it full throttle. Coffey leaned his head out the left side of the front cockpit to look for the marker he had placed down the fairway. The plane quickly gained enough speed for John to lift the tail. Now he could see ahead and concentrated on keeping the roll straight. The plane was accelerating nicely on the smooth turf. The controls came alive in John's hand.
No sweat,
he thought.
She's going to fly us out of here with room to spare.
John began to ease back on the stick. The plane was on the verge of lifting into the air.
Just at that moment, Coffey saw his marker fly past. He reached for the throttle and closed it just after the plane lifted into the air.
Startled, John immediately rammed the throttle all the way forward, wondering how in the hell the thing had slipped back to idle. The plane momentarily lost altitude, bounced on the turf, and struggled into the air again as full power was restored. They crossed the fence at the end of the fairway. Directly in front was one of the sharecropper cabins with its little brick chimney sticking about three feet higher than the roof.
John was careful to maintain best angle of climb airspeed. He was sure the wheels had cleared the roof of the cabin when there was a sharp bump. Immediately, John could feel a terrific vibration through the control stick. Cornelius, whose vision was blocked by the lower wing, thought the main gear must have struck the cabin. He turned around to see John's reaction. That's when he stared past John at the tail empennage. It was missing most of the right horizontal stabilizer and elevator, torn off when they struck the brick chimney. He motioned wildly at John, pointing toward the tail.
John snapped his head around and saw what Cornelius was pointing at. He very gently eased back on the stick, testing to see if the plane would respond to what was left of the elevator. It did so, but very sluggishly. This time it was John who closed the throttle, anxious to get the plane down before they lost what was left of the tail. He hoped there was enough of it left to flare the plane for a landing. The biplane began to settle toward earth. From the back cockpit, when a pilot eases the stick back to flare for landing, he can see very little of what lies directly ahead. John was not too concerned since they would be landing parallel to the cotton rows. The plane, shaking from nose to tail, was about twenty feet off the ground when the very top branches of a tree climbed into Coffey's view from the front cockpit. Startled, he shoved the throttle forward and grabbed the control stick in an effort to bank the plane to avoid the tree. By this time, John could see the top of the tree and was already taking evasive action.
They almost made it. Only a few feet off the dry, sun-baked cotton field, the right upper wingtip brushed tree branches. There was a sickening crack as the wingtip and aileron were torn off.
Nash, circling above waiting for the two pilots to take off and join him, watched in horror as the biplane spun around and crashed tail first onto the field. A huge grey explosion grew into a cloud obscuring the plane and its crew from his view. Flying above the frightening scene, Nash thought the plane had exploded and surely killed his two friends. A few minutes later, he was astonished to see both Robinson and Coffey walk out of the grey cloud and wave up at him.
As he continued to circle, Nash realized there had not been an explosion. The frightening cloud had been an enormous swirl of dust thrown up by the plane whirling onto the dust-choked cotton field. As the dust drifted off downwind, Nash was sure he had witnessed a miracle. His two friends had walked away from all that was left of Janet Bragg's 1928 OX5 biplane: a fuselage bereft of the better parts of its wings and tail. At least there had been no fire.
As he continued to circle above, Nash could see his two friends engaged in a lot of gesturing, stomping, and walking around one another. John took his flying helmet off, threw it on the ground, and kicked it toward Coffey. Gordon Nash decided he better land. A storm was raging below.
Robinson and Coffey were furious with one another.
“It's your fault, Coffey, for chopping the power on takeoff.”
“Well it's your fault, Robinson, for cutting the power for the emergency landing without clearing the area in front of us. You should have âS' turned to see what was ahead.”
“I didn't dare do that. What was left of the elevator may have torn away. I didn't know how much longer the control cable would hold. If either had failed, we would've nosed down and gone straight in. Who the hell would leave a tree in the middle of a cotton field anyway? You ever seen a cotton field with a tree in the middle of it? Damnit! If you hadn't put that stupid flag out there and cut the power as we lifted off, we would have made it with altitude to spare.”
“Well, we didn't make it, did we?”
By the time Nash once again landed on Fairway Six, a crowd of golfers and their caddies had climbed over the fence to see the crash.
With a crowd gathered, Robinson and Coffey calmed down and decided not to kill each other. They had both made mistakes, but by some miracle they were alive and unhurt. That was enough, they decided, until a new, more pressing argument arose between them. As Nash walked up the two were going at it again.
“You call her! You're the one who sweet-talked her into loaning us the plane. Maybe you can sweet-talk her into not killing us.”
“Not me, Coffey. You call her. You're the one who pulled the throttle on takeoff and caused us to hit the chimney.”
“I ain't gonna.”
“The hell you ain't.”
Just who was to call Janet to inform her that her airplane was scattered all over a cotton field in Alabama was a serious matter, not to mention the cost of buying her another airplane.
It was Gordon Nash that negotiated a truce. He reminded them of the purpose of the trip. The most important thing was for John to continue the trip in pursuit of their goal: establishing a school of aviation at Tuskegee. To prevent bloodshed, Nash took on the fearful task of informing Janet Waterford of what had happened to her pride and joy. “She can't yell at me too much. I didn't have anything to do with borrowing her plane.” He was wrong, of course. She was not amused. She entered into what is referred to in the South as a genuine hissy fit.
“What did she say?”
“She's gonna kill all three of us just as soon as we get back to Chicago.”
The trio calmed down enough to agree that John would continue on to the reunion celebration at Tuskegee in Nash's Buhl Pup. That was the moment another problem, in the form of an irate cotton farmer, showed up. He was not amused either. He insisted that his crop had been damaged to the tune of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, including the cleanup of “all them pieces of airplane scattered out yonder.” He further indicated that if they didn't like the price, or couldn't pay, they could take up the matter with the sheriff.
Coffey had been raised in Arkansas, Robinson in Mississippi. They definitely did not want to settle things with a white Alabama sheriff.
“All right. John, you go on right now. Get in the Buhl and fly out of here,” Coffey said.
“We don't have a hundred and twenty-five dollars between the three of us,” Robinson replied.
“I'll call some of the Air Challenger members. They'll get up the money and wire it to us at Western Union. In the meantime, Nash and I will salvage the engine and whatever else we can from the wreck. Now you go on to Tuskegee.”
It was a beautiful afternoon when the sound of an aircraft circling in the blue sky overhead caused eyes to look skyward from the campus of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute. John had called from Birmingham to ask Captain A. J. Neeley, the registrar of the college, for permission to land on one of the Institute's farm fields adjacent to the campus. Now, as he made several low passes over the campus, students and faculty poured out of the buildings and rushed to the field to witness the very first visit to Tuskegee by an aircraft, and not just any aircraft, but one flown by a graduate of the institution. John brought the plane down smoothly to settle on the pasture and taxi over to the gathered crowd. When the flight-helmeted and parachute-attired Robinson climbed from the open cockpit, he was somewhat embarrassed by the cheers that rang from the crowd. The welcome given was that for a returning hero: He was Tuskegee's own intrepid aviator.
Robinson enjoyed the festivities but wasted no time in discussing the possibilities a school of aviation with Tuskegee's president, Dr. Robert R. Moton, and his visitor, Dr. Frederic D. Patterson. John told them about the first all-Negro airfield he had helped establish at Robbins, Illinois, and the flying and aviation mechanics school he had established with his partner Cornelius Coffey, and the organization of the Challenger Air Pilots Association. He pointed out the prestige such a school would give to the Institute, and how it could be the first college to exclusively and formally open the field of aviation to black youth. He went on to lay out the details of how all of it could be accomplished and what they would need: a classroom, a grass landing strip, a plane, a hangar, an instructor, a mechanic's shop, and tools. His arguments in support of establishing a school of aviation at Tuskegee were enthusiastically received.
Before he left to return to Chicago, Dr. Moton assured Robinson that Tuskegee would establish a department of aviation as soon as necessary funds could be obtained, hopefully within the next two to three years. They also stated that they would engage him to head the department. Feeling a sense of accomplishment, he found the sky brighter and the earth greener as he flew northward toward Chicago. With an occasional roll or loop, he danced with the clouds. It was his sky that day.
Upon his return to Chicago, he sent the news to his parents and his sister. He informed Coffey and Curtiss-Wright of Tuskegee's plans. News got around and the local press began to seek him out for interviews. All seemed right with his part of the world. Unfortunately, it was not with the rest of the world.
P
ILOTS WILL AGREE THAT AN AIRCRAFT WILL ALMOST ALWAYS GIVE
indications of oncoming problemsâincreased oil consumption, low compression, subtle noises, vibrationsâin time to allow the prudent pilot to avoid catastrophe. Unlike well-trained aviators, those in high places who pilot nations almost always seem unable or unwilling to recognize signs of serious trouble and take corrective action in time to prevent disaster.
Far from the shores of America, dogs of war were howling to be let loose. The scent of blood was in their nostrils. Their master in Rome would soon unleash them to tear apart the flesh of an ancient Christian people on the high plateaus of Ethiopia.
What better place to begin Mussolini's conquest for a new Roman empire than an African nation assumed to contain rich farmland and great, unexploited natural resources? It was true that Ethiopia was the only African nation that had never been conquered by colonial powers or its Muslim neighbors. Italy knew that firsthand. In 1896 Ethiopia, then called Abyssinia, had given the Italians an embarrassing defeat at Adowa, but that was well over a quarter century ago. Italy now had modern industries that turned out tanks, guns, and aircraft. Ethiopia had no such capacity. Il Duce bragged that he would avenge the defeat of 1896 and bring glorious new empire to Italy. The new colony of Italian Ethiopia would, he said, provide land for the crowded Italian citizenry and greatly benefit Italy's faltering economy.
Few in the world paid attention. That would prove to be a very bad mistake. Mussolini, you see, a former corporal during the Great War, invented Fascism in 1922. That most in the Western world chose to ignore Mussolini and his new form of government would prove terribly costly in terms of human life, not to mention treasure. The one man who did pay close attention, who took notice not only of Mussolini's Fascist form of government but of the way he had used his Black Shirt thugs to gain power, had also been a corporal in the Great War, a German corporal. This ex-corporal's name was Adolf Hitler. American newspapers did carry a little news about Mussolini and “incidents” along the border between Italian Somaliland and Ethiopia, but such reports were mostly on the back pages.