Confederate
Air Force, RIP
by
Brian Dunaway
by Brian Dunaway
Lew
Rockwell’s 1996
article on O.P. Alford, III was inspirational – I would certainly
like to have met this man, and hope I’m that productive in my nineties.
I
couldn’t help but note Mr. Alford’s involvement in the Confederate
Air Force (CAF) – many of my friends here in the NASA Johnson Space
Center (JSC) community derive great joy in the annual air show at
Ellington Field, of which the CAF is a major participant.
This
was originally going to be a quick note to Lew, to convey my appreciation
for the article, but when I realized I was writing with the same
manner and speed as I did the other
column I wrote for this site regarding aviation, it occurred
to me how much aviation had gotten into my blood.
But
the aviation infection is easy to get here. An old friend who grew
up in the area described it as a neighbor on the street screaming,
"Hey y’all, come on, we’re going to build a space ship!"
And they did.
(This
is not intended as any kind of anarcho-capitalist thesis – God forbid
that I have contradictions in my soul!)
Surely
the astronauts typify this spirit, and there’s a degree of astronaut
worship among some, but that’s not in my nature. But I’ve worked
with my share of astronauts, most closely during advanced space
suit tests. One of those was Sonny Carter, and if he wasn’t an over-achiever,
I don’t know who is.
Sonny
was a professional soccer player for the Atlanta Chiefs, a well-decorated
Marine, Top Gun pilot, expert SCUBA diver, and a surgeon. He was
also very easy to work with, and thorough, and went so far as to
attempt surgical knots with the prototype gloves we were testing
underwater.
And
I certainly had my share of fun as a test subject, including space
suit testing at vacuum and on the KC-135, the "Vomit Comet."
It’s
not called the "Vomit Comet" for nothing. During two-minute
parabolas (the 0-g portion only lasts around 25 seconds), the modified
707 (and its wary contents) undergoes 1-g, 2-g, 1-g, 0-g, 1-g …
then over and over and over again. It’s the roller coaster from
Hell.
Now
it was well known that Sonny was not fond of the KC-135, and he
was trying to avoid the tests we had planned for him on it. "Uh,
someone needs to try to talk him into it," as they looked at
me. "Alright, I’ll do it."
After
a friendly chat (I know he knew what was coming), I made my case.
Now remember, this is a Top Gun pilot talking, "Brian, I’d
rather eat live roaches off the floor than fly on that plane."
After that comment I acquiesced, but he lost in the end – the Engineering
Director called the Mission Operations Director and that was that.
In
the very end, the JSC Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory was named
after Sonny, as while he was on NASA business, the passenger plane
he was aboard crashed in his home state of Georgia. (Sen. John Tower
was also aboard that plane.)
(One
more little nugget: All the astronauts that have met their Maker
did so while they were doing what they wanted, and were profoundly
aware of the risks. Mourning is one thing, whining is another. Their
deaths may rip the hearts from some of us, but a tragedy it isn’t.)
To
be certain, I could not not get my pilot’s license in this environment.
It was ontological.
In
fact, my first flight instructor was really into the Zen of flying,
and had me read poetry aloud before lessons. He also insisted I
read Night
Flight, by Antoine
de Saint-Exupéry, a metaphysical treatise for aviation
if there ever was one. The work was later made into a 1933 film
with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy, and Lionel and John Barrymore. The
plane of Saint-Exupéry, who was best known for The
Little Prince, disappeared on a reconnaissance flight that
left Corsica for the south of France, and was
found just this month.
But
I digress.
A
good thumbnail history of the CAF is found here
(be sure to scroll down to see the CAF blood chit!):
The
origins of the Confederate Air Force date back to 1951, with
the purchase of a surplus Curtiss P-40 Warhawk by Lloyd Nolen,
a former World War II Army Air Corps flight instructor. In 1957,
Nolen and four friends purchased a P-51 Mustang, each sharing
in the $2,500 cost of the aircraft. With the purchase of the
Mustang, known as Red Nose, the group was unofficially
founded.
On
September 6, 1961, the CAF was chartered as a nonprofit Texas
corporation in order to restore and preserve World War II-era
combat aircraft. In 1965, the first museum building consisting
of 26,000 square feet was completed at old Rebel Field, Mercedes,
Texas. The CAF created a new Rebel Field at Harlingen, Texas,
when they moved there in 1968, occupying three large buildings.
The CAF fleet continued to grow and included medium and heavy
bombers such as the B-29, B-25, B-17 and B-24.
Today,
the CAF is comprised of over 11,000 members, several hundred
of whom serve as pilots and flight or maintenance crew members
committed to preserving World War II American aviation heritage.
The CAF is responsible for operating a fleet of more than 140
airplanes known as the Ghost Squadron.
The
dynamic and patriotic O.P. Alford III died in 1996, and I'm glad
he didn't live to see the CAF lose its name.
Not
long after 9-11, the name change was announced at an American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) annual banquet across the
street from JSC. I was really looking forward to the guest speaker
from the Confederate Air Force, but my fragile mood had already
been made sullen by a military officer at my table that seemed to
be looking forward to kicking some towel-headed ass.
And
at the end of the very entertaining CAF presentation, the announcement:
Because the word "Confederate" is offensive to some, after
fifty years, the CAF was to change its name within the next few
days. I know it wasn’t just the evil eye I cast in his direction,
the presenter knew this wasn’t right, as cowardice was written all
over his face.
So
if you want to link to them in all their cowardly glory, the
old URL for the CAF still works, but it now takes you to the
home page of the "Commemorative"
Air Force.
But
don’t look for the word "Confederate" in the "Commemorative
Air Force History" page, or anywhere else on the site. You
won’t find it. In their defense, what would they say? "Because
the collective huevos of the CAF are the same as that of a little
girl, in the year 2002 the word ‘Confederate’ was removed from the
name of the organization."
To
hear the old CAF lore, long ago a group of South Texans chose the
name Confederate Air Force as kind of a joke. Well, it’s no joke
now.
May
1, 2004
Brian
Dunaway [send him
mail] is a chemical engineer and a native Texan.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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