The Red
Knight
This solo RCAF
aerial acrobatic act flew in air shows from 1958 through the 1960s.
I
think it was the summer of 1959, that we went to see an Air Show in Fort
William. I remember seeing the RCAF Golden Hawks perform. I also remember us
walking on a large asphalt surface to look at a large number of static plane
displays on the ground.
I am not
sure if it was the same air show, but I also remember watching a performance
by the Red Knight. This might have been at a later event in Fort William or
Edmonton. The Red Knight was an RCAF pilot who flew a red painted T-33
Silver Star in a solo aerobatic performance.
I remember that I
loved the look of the sleek red jet and the vertical flights and hammerhead
turns. As I was watching him perform, I started really getting into the
aircraft maneuvers, and I suddenly started to feel a sense of what it was
like to be flying the plane. As the plane made its turns, I felt like I was
in the plane and could feel the G-forces affecting me. I suddenly sensed
that I could remember flying that jet or one like it. I turned to my
brothers and told them "I'm the Red Knight. I'm the Red Knight." Of course
they thought I was talking nonsense.
The T-33 was the jet that Lt. Moncla received his advanced flight training,
while stationed at Reese Air Force Base, in Lubbock, Texas. A side note of
some interest was that the call name assigned to Moncla and Wilson’s last
flight was “Avenger Red”.
I think it was that fall that I first entered school which was right behind
our house on Moodie Street. At recess we played various games like tag and
cops and robbers I guess. One of the boys had an idea of played that we were
Jet Fighters. He started with his back against the wall and his arms
stretched out and swept back like and F-86. He would start slowly and then
accelerate to a run, and then bank of in one direction or another before
returning back to his original spot.
I really got into the idea of pretending I was in a fighter jet, and was
playing this game by myself, long after the other boys lost interest in it.
Note: My recollection of watching the airshow happened while I was driving
on my trip to Madison in late 2001. I had just been daydreaming about the
times our family had when we lived in Thunder Bay. When I had the memory of
watching the Red Knight, I wasn’t even completely sure that there was such
an act and I thought, well maybe this was something I was imagining had
occurred. When I got back from my trip, I searched the Internet and found
out that there had been such an airshow performer in the late 1950s and
early 1960s. I asked my brother about this, and he told me that the time we
went to the airshow in Fort William, that the featured acts included the
Golden Hawks. He could also remember that we had seen the Red Knight
perform. He didn’t remember that I had told them that I was the Red Knight,
but of course, at that time, he just thought this was just a very stupid
story that I was making up.