Second Truax Jet, 2 Fliers Missing
Lost Over Lake Superior
Probe Crash Fatal to Two in U. Arboretum
A second Truax Field F-89C Scorpion jet plane was
reported missing today with two occupants, even as searchers continued
efforts to recover the bodies of two other fliers who died Monday when
their plane plunged into the mud in a marshy area near Lake Wingra.
Occupants of the second plane, which disappeared Monday
afternoon over Lake Superior, were 1st Lt. Felix E. Moncla, Jr., 27, of 12
Sherman Ter., the pilot, and 2nd Lt. Robert L. Wilson, 22, of 301
Huntington Ct. the radar observer.
Killed in the Wingra crash were 1st Lt. John W.
Schmidt, 28, the pilot, and Capt. Glen E. Collins, 30, radar observer. Lt.
Schmidt, a native of Del Rio, Tex., lived at 10 Sherman Ter., and Capt.
Collins, native of Indianapolis, Ind., lived at 24 Craig Ave.
Lt. Col. Henry W. Shoup, Truax base commander, said the
jet interceptor involved in the second crash had taken off from Kinross
Air Base near Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Monday at 5:22 p.m. to investigate
an unidentified plane over the lake. The Truax jet was at the Michigan
base as a replacement for regular teams from the field sent to Yuma, Ariz.
for gunnery maneuvers.
The spot of disappearance was about 70 miles northeast
of Keweenan Point in Upper Michigan an 40 miles southeast of the Ontario
shoreline. Air Force planes and most guard boats joined in a hunt for the
missing fliers today, but snow and cold were hampering search. Shoup said
he doubted if the fliers could remain alive overnight if they fell into
the cold water.
Moncla, married and the father of two children is a
native of Moreauville, La. Wilson, who was single, was a son of Renne
Wilson of Ponca City, Okla.
Crews of both Truax planes were members of the 433rd
Fighter-Interceptor squadron according to Col. Shoup.
An Air Force clamshell crane was being used today to
lift wreckage of the crashed Scorpion in the mud-filled hole of the
University Arboretum in an attempt to find the bodies of Schmidt and
Collins.
Col. Shoup said he was convinced that the men had stuck
with their plane in an attempt to keep it crashing into densely-occupied
areas of Madison. He praised the co-operation of police, firemen, members
of the press and radio and others in trying to find the men.
He added that an all-out effort will be made to salvage
every bit of the wreckage to present to an investigating board of experts
so that the cause of the mishap may be determined.
Wreckage was scattered over a wide area, some of it
blown into Lake Wingra by an explosion which ripped the ship immediately
after it plunged into the marsh. A salvage crew from Truax Field used a
boat on the lake today in search for debris.
Officials were inclined to believe that a sudden
mechanical failure caused the crash and the two occupants of the plane had
no opportunity to radio that they were in distress or to bail out of the
speeding craft.
The plane, aloft on a routine training flight, sped
northwesterly across the southern outskirts of Madison, and crashed into
the marsh at the edge of Lake Wingra and about one fourth mile west of the
bridge across Murphy's Creek at the end of South Mills street.
The explosion hurled mud and plane parts over trees,
broke upper limbs of some trees, shook buildings in the area, and cracked
a storm window in one home in the vicinity.
Police and firemen sped to the scene to aid Truax Field
rescue squads and airmen volunteers from the field in attempts to recover
the bodies of the fliers and the wreckage of the plane.
Shortly after the crash site was located, two torn but
unopened parachutes were fished from the marsh with pike poles.
Numerous persons witnessed the F-89C Scorpion jet. They
heard the roar of the low-flying plane, then saw it tip downward. The
plunge was followed by an explosion which tore a huge hole in the marsh
and sent mud and plane parts flying into the air.
Among those reporting seeing the crash of hearing the
explosion are Mrs. Warren Young, 2201 Woodland Way; Mrs. Pauline Adams,
2401 Balden St., in whose home a window was cracked; R. A. Scheiber, 5404
Pleasant Hill Rd.; Mrs. Donald Alme, 920 Dane St.; Mrs. Juanita Gray,
Syene Road; George Parks, 309 Russell St.; Andrew Grosse, Route 1, Cross
Plains; David Welch, 2027 Madison St.; Lloyd R. Burr, 937 Dane St.; and
Atty. John Riley, 1526 Vilas Ave.
The hole gouged out by the exploding plane is about 50
feet in diameter and about 10 feet deep.
Workers in rubber suits entered the muddy pond to
search for the bodies and wreckage. They were aided by Martin Lemberger,
513 S. Brooks St., former Navy diver.