
Limer, Ontario - Sign for Siding on Algoma Central
Railway
East of Wawa, Ontario and north of Sault Ste. Marie
In the days following the disappearance of the F-89, search crews received
many tips from the public about information they felt might be relevant to
the disappearance of the F-89. As the F-89 was presumed lost over Canadian
waters of Lake Superior, the search effort was lead by the RCAF's Eastern
Area Rescue Co-ordination Centre from Trenton, Ontario who had set up
temporary search headquarters at the USAF base at Kinross, Michigan. Their
report on the unsuccessful search and rescue mission "Operation SAR
Scorpion" refers to two clues received which were considered reliable. One
was from a mail courier who thought he had seen wreckage of an aircraft in
the water in the Cut River Bridge area of Michigan. Michigan state police
searched this area three times and discounted the sighting as rocks. A
second clue was reported as the sighting of wreckage on the side of the
mountain on the eastern shore of the lake about 80 miles north of Kinross.
This area was searched with negative results.
No other mention of clues was made in the SAR report, but two newspaper
articles referred to reports that Algoma Central Railway crews had heard a
crash on the night of the F-89 disappearance. The two articles do not
mention the specific location but the article in a Madison newspaper states
that the USAF made a sweep over the north shore of Lake Superior following
the reports from the Algoma Central Railway crews located about 100 miles
north of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. A newspaper article that referred back
to the incident, published in the Sault Star on October 31, 1968 stated:
"November 28, the search by US and Canadian forces
aircraft was called off, but reopened Nov. 30, following a statement by
Algoma Central Railway workers that they heard a crash about 100 miles north
of here shortly after Kinross lost contact."
A
second search for the missing F-89 was launched in May 1954 after further
information was received by the Renne O. Wilson, the father of the radar
operator. A report on the second search was prepared by the 49th
Air Rescue Squadron, based in Selfridge Air Force Base in Michigan. It
states that the search was reopened based on reports of a low flying
aircraft in the vicinity of Limer, Ontario. The information had been
received and investigated at the time of the original search mission but it
was determined to have no relative bearing on the incident because of time
differentiation. Since that time, the individual who had reported the low
flying aircraft stated he might have been mistaken in the time.
Was this individual one of the member's of an Algoma Central Railway crew
who had reported hearing a crash? The railway crew was reported as located
100 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie. Today, Limer, Ontario is nothing more
than a siding of the Algoma Central Railway and it is located about 95 miles
north of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. It is unfortunate that the report
provides no other information on the witnesses account. Did the witness see
a low flying airplane or did he just hear the low flying airplane. If he
heard the low flying airplane, he should have been able to distinguish
whether it was a powered by a propeller or a jet engine as the two sounds
are easy to distinguish. If the sound was from a propeller-powered plane then
this would certainly rule out an association with the missing F-89. If it
had been a jet powered engine, then it almost certainly would have been from
the missing F-89 as all other F-89's flying that night were flying at high
altitudes (20,000 feet or more) way out over Lake Superior, not over
northern Ontario.
The sound of a crash from the railway crew also raises questions.
Presumably this was not the sound of a tree falling or a bear moving
through the bush, as the railway workers would be familiar with these
sounds. It must have made a much different sound like those associated with
the crashes of planes, trains or automobiles. Presumeably, these reports
originated at a site along the Algoma Central Railway at or near Limer,
Ontario. It should have been possible to identify the source of the crash
sound if it involved an automobile or train. If it had been another airplane
besides the F-89 then there should have been reports of another missing
plane. It is possible that the reports were a case of public mischief,
although it seems unlikely that several individuals would conspire in this
manner when the lives of two airmen were at stake.
What other possibilities are there? Perhaps they were all just imagining
they heard a crash and saw or heard a low flying plane.
It is possible that whatever was seen or heard that night near the railway
siding at Limer, Ontario was not related to the disappearance of the F-89,
but perhaps this does add another dimension of mystery to the incident.

Limer, Ontario - Algoma Central Railway Siding
Location where railway crew heard the jet crash on Nov. 23, 1953