THE BIG CARNIVAL
September 24, 2009
The story of a 1950's Cold War scandal that ruined an Air Force pilot's
career and rocked his marriage - all when the news media stirred up
false suspicions about his heroic 54-day survival ordeal in the Sierra
Nevada wilderness.
(Also see another post at this blog, "Fifty Years Later: An Air Force Pilot's Bravery Outshines his Public Humiliation
," a magazine article originally published at The American Thinker.)
SHOOTING STAR: The last flight of Lt. David Steeves
By David Paulin
Chapter 1.
Praying for a Miracle
"For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found." Luke 15:24 (King James version)
It was the answer to her prayers - a collect phone call. It was wondrous and shocking. A miracle, really.
Elsie Steeves, alone at home that day, thought of her son David -- and she
prayed. Fifty-four days earlier on May 9, 1957, the 23-year-old Air
Force pilot had disappeared over California's rugged Sierra Nevada
mountains, while making a solo flight in his two-seat training jet, a
T-33 Shooting Star. According to the Air Force, he was dead. Little was
known about her son's final minutes: He was level at 33,500 feet and had
made a routine radio call, just 35 minutes after taking off from
Oakland, California's airport. After that, nothing was ever heard from
him. It was supposed to have been a routine cross-country flight.
The disappearance attracted only minor attention in the next day's newspapers.
The Oakland Tribune ran a short article on an inside page, its headline reading:
"Wide Search for Vanished Jet Trainer".
Over the next few days, Air Force search-and-rescue planes overflew the
mountainous terrain where the jet was thought to have crashed. But no
trace of Steeves or his jet could be found in some of America's roughest
terrain. After three weeks, the Air Force issued a death certificate
for 1st Lt. David Arthur Steeves. But Elsie Steeves and her husband
Harold refused to believe it.
Someday, their phone would ring -- and their prayers would be answered, they believed.
The military at the time had traditionally waited a year and a day before
issuing a death certificate. But given the realities of Steeves' last
flight, Air Force officials suspended that policy: Even if he'd ejected
and landed in one piece, they reasoned, he never could have survived in
the ice and snow-covered mountains, which had gotten a heavy snow soon
after his jet went down.
But Elsie and Harold Steeves found room for hope. Search planes, after all,
found no body -- not a trace of wreckage. Their son could be somewhere
in the Sierra Nevada -- alive, injured, struggling to find his way home.
Hope came easily to the Steeves. Deeply religious, they believed that
God really could answer one's prayers; that God and religion still were
the most important influences in American life.
"We just felt sure he would come out some day," Elise Steeves later told a
newspaper reporter. "There's nothing impossible when the Lord is there".
And no matter what the Air Force said, Steeves' parents believed it was
too early to give up hope. Harold Steeves, for his part, felt he knew
his son better than the Air Force: He was in superb physical shape, a
resourceful and deliberative young man who had never been afraid of
anybody or anything. "I figured if he got down in any shape at all that
he could take care of the situation," he later said. "They told me it
was a clear day when he crashed and that he was flying at 35,000 feet,
and so I figured he had a 50-50 chance because he had a chance to use
his parachute and it was daytime."
___________________
It was the best and worst of times for Americans in July, 1957. The
post-war baby boom was continuing unabated, and jobs were plentiful
during President Dwight D. Eisenhower second term. Americans were on a
spending spree: Cars and television sets were among the most coveted
consumer items. That July, government economic figures revealed that
personal incomes were at a record high.
Yet Americans faced dangers, too, just as they had for most of the decade.
Soon after World War II ended in 1945, the Soviet Union demonstrated its
character and intentions, oppressively ruling Eastern Europe and
supporting communist-led insurgencies across the globe. Now, the Cold
War was at its height. America's leaders sought to hold back an
expansionist Soviet Union under the 10-year-old Truman Doctrine -- now a
cornerstone of Washington's foreign policy. President Harry Truman, a
Democrat, had put forth his famous doctrine in 1947, when winning
bipartisan Congressional support for $400 million to aid Greece and
Turkey's fragile governments defeat communist insurgencies. He
declared: "I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to
support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed
minorities or by outside pressures".
Now in 1957, America was engaged in an epic test of wills and ideologies
with the Soviet Union, not to mention nuclear brinkmanship. This
included above-ground tests of nuclear weapons, which the Air Force's
new B-52 strategic bombers could deliver anywhere on the planet. In
Nevada's desert that summer, a spate of nuclear explosions sent fiery
black mushroom clouds boiling into the sky. Their shock waves rattled
Las Vegas casinos - and they even shook the ground in the Sierra Nevada
Mountains, giving Steeves a fright as he wandered about, lost, trying to
find his way back to civilization. The Air Force by then had given him
up for dead.
Exactly one week before Steeves ejected over the mountains, former Wisconsin
senator Joe McCarthy had died. Earlier in the decade, the Republican
senator had disgraced himself with his unfounded and irresponsible
accusations about communist spies in the government. Yet as the
senator's conduct became an issue, a larger truth was lost: More than a
few Americans deeply admired the Soviet Union's experiment in communism.
Some were in fact employed by the government. Others lent aid and
comfort to America's enemy, as was underscored by two of the decade's
most controversial spy trials. One sent Algier Hiss to prison, and the
other sent Ethel and Julius Rosenberg to the electric chair. These
Americans, like their counterparts today, were not convinced that
America was one of the good guys.
It was easier to ignore such folks in 1957 than it is today, for no
American servicemen were dying in battle anywhere in 1957. Yet the Cold
War was in fact claiming a number of American lives in the 1940s and 50s
- those of military pilots. In 1947, the Air Force reported more than
1,500 major accidents claiming the lives of more than 500 pilots. And as
the carnage continued into 1948 and 1950s, it included some 31 American
fliers who died during the nearly year-long Berlin Air Lift. In 2006,
in contrast, the Air Force reported its safest year to date, recording a
handful of crashes and mishaps - and just one fatality.
Military pilots in 1957 didn't need a statistician to tell them about the risks
they faced -- and nor did their wives or girlfriends or their mothers.
They only needed to read the newspapers. The Oakland Tribune,
besides its brief story about Steeves' disappearance, carried three
other reports about mishaps involving military airplanes in its
afternoon edition of May 10, 1957.
The most dramatic was a front-page story about a Navy Tradewind bomber that
had ditched in San Francisco Bay that very morning -- just 40 minutes
after taking off from Alameda Naval Air Station. The pilot had been
unable to maintain altitude after one of the seaplane's four turbo-prop
engines developed a runaway propeller. The seaplane's 16-man crew was
plucked from the water. It was supposed to have been a routine training
flight.
On that same day, another story in the Oakland Tribune described
how a Navy P2V Neptune patrol plane - also on a training flight -- had
ditched 170 miles southwest of Honolulu after one of its two piston
engines caught fire. The 10-man crew scrambled into a life raft, and a
U.S. Navy submarine rescued them four hours later. Closer to the San
Francisco Bay Area, the paper reported that a Navy Globemaster cargo
plane had made a harrowing emergency landing at Travis Air Force Base
after one of its four piston engines developed a runaway propeller.
It was called a cold war. But given the risk inherent in flying
high-performance military aircraft, it might as well have been a hot war
for military pilots. Sometimes they died lonely and horrible deaths, as
Steeves apparently had, falling from 35,500 feet into the oblivion of
snow and ice-covered mountains. Their family members and loved ones
could only pray for their souls -- or for their safe return if they'd
gone missing. And to have them go missing, that was the worst, everybody
agreed: never knowing their fate, lacking a body to bury so that
families and loved ones could move on with their lives.
When military pilots were killed or went missing, their hometown newspapers
often ran stories about them on inside pages, beside photos of them in
their military uniforms. It was the kind of news story that
Connecticut's Bridgeport Post ran about 1st Lt. Steeves two days after he'd disappeared.
On rare occasions when a flier went missing, however, his family and loved
ones had their prayers answered. The answer for Elsie Steeves arrived
at 4 p.m. on July 1, 1957. When she picked up the phone in her Trumbull
home, what happened next could have been out of a plot from the "The
Twilight Zone." But at the time, nobody would have made such a
comparison. The hit television series would not debut for another two
years, captivating Americans with its spooky and quirky plots that often
highlighted the angst of the era. Watching the "Twilight Zone" after it
aired, David Steeves could have easily imagined he'd lived out one of
its strange plots during the second half of 1957.
"Hello?" Elsie Steeves said. It was the operator, and in a matter-of-fact voice,
she said: "Collect call from Lt. David Steeves".
Elsie Steeves gasped. Then she heard the voice, David's voice, and she knew
it was true. Yes, thank God, her once-dead son was alive and speaking to her.
"I don't want this to be too much of a shock for you," he told her, as gently as he could.
"I just walked in from the woods of the High Sierras".
"Oh David, thank God!" she cried.
Steeves had shambled into the ranger's office at California's Kings Canyon
National Park minutes earlier, sporting a bushy beard and wearing his
grimy flight suit that hung loosely over him, for in the wilderness he'd
lost some 30 to 40 pounds. He drew stares and quizzical expressions. At
first, nobody quite believed his incredible story about living 54 days
in the wilderness after ejecting from his jet. Immediately, he asked to
make a collect call, and they pointed him to a phone.
Steeves first asked the operator to ring his older brother Harold in Fairfield,
Connecticut. Harold, he figured, could gently let his parents and wife
know that he wasn't dead. But Harold wasn't home. So he phoned his mother.
They talked about 15 minutes after she got over her shock. She listened in stunned
disbelief, occasionally gasping at something he told her. "It just
exploded," he said of his jet. "I was unconscious for a while. I came to
and bailed out".
He assured her he was OK, other than having lost weight and twisting his
ankles during the hard parachute landing in the mountains. He quickly
asked about his wife Rita and their infant daughter, Leisa, and his
mother said they'd left Craig Air Force Base, where he'd been based near
Selma, Alabama. Now they lived with Rita's mom and stepfather in nearby
Fairfield. She told him about the death certificate. But she assured
him that neither she nor his father had ever believed he was dead. "I
knew there were plenty of prayers going out for me, and I felt every
one," he told her. "I know I have the Lord to thank for being alive".
She was no doubt pleased to hear that: David had not taken religion nearly
as seriously as they had hoped he would. Sometimes, he'd been something
of a rebel, having tested his parents' patience and authority as a
teenager.
Like any mother would, Elsie Steeves asked her son if he'd be going back to flying.
"I sure am," he said.
"Oh, he loves it," she told a newspaper reporter. "All the Air Force boys
love it! He wanted to be a pilot since he was a child".
"I put my faith and trust in God, and he certainly did a good job of it," she added.
Steeves was disappointed Rita hadn't been there, for he had much to
tell her. Alone and facing death, he'd seen his life more clearly --
realized how important his family was to him, and how important God was, too.
Within hours, reporters were telephoning Elsie and Herald Steeves, showing up at their
door. They had no doubt that this was a terrific story - and maybe the
biggest one they would ever cover.
To Elsie Steeves, the reporters must have seemed like nice enough people.
They seemed genuinely concerned about David's well being, wanted to hear
all about what had happened to him; wanted to know as well about how
she and her husband had borne up the whole time -- and what they now
were thinking and feeling.
Elsie Steeves could be sure about one thing: Her son was a hero. And that's
how the newspapers in fact portrayed him. Little could she have guessed
at the strange turn the media coverage would take later that summer -
when the newspapers started implying all sorts of awful things about
David and his survival in the Sierra Nevada.
It must have been a terrible experience for Elsie Steeves, a mother who
believed in miracles. Five years earlier, she never could have guessed
at the path that led her son to scandal and disgrace - those flying
lessons he took as a teenager.
It all started in 1952, when he was 18, during the fall of his senior year
in high school. Steeves walked into a flight school at the local
airport: He wanted to take lessons, he said. It has always been a common
path for many future military and commercial pilots -- taking flying
lessons as teenagers. Sizing up Steeves, the school's manager no doubt
saw an apt student: He was strapping and clean-cut, a varsity football
player more than 6-feet tall.
Steeves, an average student in high school, looked around and liked what he saw.
Small and medium-sized airports in the 1950s bustled with light-plane
activity, and usually one or more small and unpretentious "ma and pa"
flight schools were on the field. They gladly welcomed aviation-crazy
kids like Steeves. Before scheduling a lesson, they'd usually gave them a
tour of the hangers and planes, perhaps introduced them to any flight
instructors and charter pilots who were around. The pilots were
invariably friendly and down-to-earth folks -- and with rare exceptions
they were men. Some of them, those in their 30s and 40s, may even have
flown in World War II.
Steeves had a secret when he climbed for the first time into the small two-seat
trainer with his instructor: His parents had not given their OK for the
lessons - did not even know about them. He'd only headed to the airport
after they'd gone off together on a fall vacation, leaving him home
with his 23-year-old brother, Herald. He paid for the lessons with money
saved up from an after-school job as a laborer at the Bridgeport Metal
Goods Manufacturing Company.
The desire to learn how to fly appeals to people for different reasons.
Like many teenagers, Steeves surely found a feeling of escape and
independence, perhaps even a socially acceptable outlet for a certain
rebellious spirit. He felt bottled up in his comfortable middle-class
home, bristled at all the rules his parents imposed.
Deeply religious, Harold and Elsie Steeves were members of a fundamentalist
evangelical church. They forbid smoking and drinking in their home.
Prayers were said before every meal. But as Steeves bowed his head and
folded his hands, reciting the prayers he knew by heart, he must have
wondered if it was all a bit old-fashioned. This was the 1950s, after
all. An age of Rock 'N Roll and James Dean, the brooding young actor.
His 1955 films "Rebel Without a Cause" and "East of Eden" appealed to
youthful movie audiences -- to kids who identified with the rebellious
teenagers whom Dean portrayed.
In the 1950s, many teenagers needed more than America's post-war
prosperity to make them happy. Some of them rebelled, although it was
not always clear what made them so alienated and edgy. That was
underscored by a famous line in the 1953 movie "The Wild One" about a
marauding California motorcycle gang. Asked what he's rebelling against,
a leather-jacketed Johnny (Marlin Brando), replies: "Whaddya got"?
Steeves was no Johnny, but he was restless and longed to be independent. "I
thought my parents were too strict, and in the summers I could hardly
wait to get away," he told a writer for Redbook, the woman's magazine,
in a lengthy article published in January, 1958.
When he was 15, Steeves recalled spending the summer on a farm in upstate
New York, working for a farmer who served as a "Youth for Christ" leader
in the church his family attended. And the summer before his senior
year, he hitchhiked to Alaska - a trip his parent's never would have
allowed if they'd known what their son was up to.
As every hip kid knows, however, it's easy to buffalo square parents. And
that's what Steeves did, telling them he was going to a farm in Alberta,
Canada, to work with a friend for the summer. He'd get a car ride and
then take a bus, he assured them. Square parents, of course, always want
to think the best of their children: OK, David. We trust you.
But when their boy got out of their reach, he started hitchhiking on
westbound roads - and he only stopped when he'd gotten to Alaska. For
the footloose Steeves, the summer was like something out of Jack
Kerouac's 1957 "On the Road" -- though for the clean-cut Steeves, it
presumably was far more wholesome than anything in Kerouac's novel,
which soon became a manifesto for the decade's pot-smoking and
poetry-reciting "Beat Generation." In Alaska, Steeves told of working
odd jobs - gas station attendant, stevedore, salmon canner, road-tarring
laborer, and as a crew member aboard a 100-foot boat hauling Salmon to Seattle.
Back home that fall, he discovered a different kind of freedom - flying.
With his instructor beside him, he flew the two-seat trainer on his first
lesson, taking it up a few thousand feet over southwestern Connecticut's
rolling countryside. His instructor, speaking loudly above the noisy
engine, talked Steeves through the basic maneuvers. In no time, the
teenager was shooting take-offs and landings, without any help from the
instructor. One day, after several hours of instruction, the instructor
got out of the plane after Steeves had landed: OK, he said, do some
take-offs and landings by yourself. Steeves eagerly taxied out to the
runway. He eased the throttle forward and the plane was quickly
airborne.
His first solo: It ended too quickly. He taxied in, cut the engine, and the
propeller rattled to a stop. It was what other teenagers taking flying
lessons experienced, and Steeves no doubt went through the same routine.
All his buddies, Steeves knew, were out throwing around footballs; working
after-school jobs; holding hands with their girlfriends on long walks.
However, he'd flown a light plane by himself! Not even his instructor
could second guess him - or help him out in an emergency.
He climbed out of the trainer, and his instructor walked up and smiled. "Congratulations"!
"Thanks," Steeves grinned, his spirits soaring. It felt like getting a first kiss
from a girl you're crazy about. And Steeves know something about that
because he had a girl. Her name was Rita. They'd been going together
since his junior year. Back in the flight school's office, his flight
instructor filled out Steeves' logbook as usual, noting the maneuvers
that were done -- and then he wrote in big letters: "First Solo."
If only his parents knew what he'd done; Steeves must of grinned at the
thought. But when they returned from their vacation, he told them
everything, no doubt because he wanted them to be proud of him. They
saw the excitement in his eyes. Obviously, he loved flying; maybe he'd
found his vocation. So reluctantly, they let their boy continue with the
lessons, which included additional solo flights and lessons with his
instructor beside him. There was some book learning, too. At the time,
many instructors recommended a popular book published in 1944: "Stick
& Rudder: An Explanation of the Art of Flying".
It was the perfect book for young men who sought in flying a challenge and
adventure - a chance to prove their mettle. Author Wolfgang
Langewiesche, a veteran test pilot, stressed up front that the "art of
flying" was not for everybody: It took some "nerve" to master; and to
prove his point, he mentioned the high accident rate suffered by
light-plane pilots -- those who obviously didn't measure up. "There are
situations in flying when he who 'ducks,' he who flinches, is lost," he
wrote. In some do-or-die situations, for example, he said it took
courage to manipulate the controls in ways that defied deeply ingrained
habits - even common sense. Pulling the control stick aft, after all,
could make an airplane go down - not up! Stick & Rudder got right to
the point in its opening paragraphs"
Get rid at the onset of the idea that the airplane is an air-going sort of
automobile. It isn't. It may sound like one and smell like one, and it
may have been interior-decorated to look like one; but the difference is
-- it goes on wings.
And a wing is an odd thing, strangely behaved, hard to understand, tricky to
handle. In many respects, a wing's behavior is exactly contrary to
common sense. On wings it is safe to be high, dangerous to be low; safe
to go fast, dangerous to go slow.
____________________
After graduating from high school, Steeves entered Norwich Military
University in Northfield, Vermont. But he still had the flying bug
during the fall of 1953. So when he heard about the Air Force's Aviation
Cadet Program, he was intrigued. No four-year degree was required. He'd
go right into pilot and officer training - and that sure beat college.
He wanted to be a pilot, after all. And who knew: Maybe he'd end up
flying jets! Jets were where it was at; they were so cooool (as
1950s-era kids used to say, drawing out the word rather than spitting it
out abruptly like kids do today.) Jets were the future, Steeves knew.
He'd read about those heart-stopping dogfights in the Korean War, those
calm and dashing American pilots flying silver F-86 Saber jets, taking
on North Korean, Chinese and Russian pilots in "MiG Alley." A ceasefire
had ended the Korean War in July.
Steeves applied for the cadet program after Christmas, went through physical
exams and psychological testing and personal interviews. He passed. Soon
he was at Lackland Field in San Antonio, Texas, undergoing 15 months of
officer and pilot training. He was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant in the
Air Force Reserve on June 15, 1955. Now 21, he wore the coveted silver
wings of an Air Force pilot on his uniform. And five days later, he got
married: It's what serious men his age did at the time. People who
expected to be taken seriously were married.
And of course, Steeves married his high school sweetheart: Rita Lundstrom.
She was 19-years-old, blond and remarkably beautiful -- and smart. She
was getting married at just the right time, too: Most women back then,
those who wanted to avoid becoming old maids, got married when they were
between 18 and 20.
The couple had gone to different high schools in the area and had met at a
church-organized outing for young people; and even though they were both
juniors, she was two years younger than him and others in her class.
Recently, Rita had graduated from the University of Bridgeport as a
dental hygienist. At the time, it was a traditional "woman's job" along
with working as a secretary, librarian, teacher, or nurse.
The day after the couple's wedding, the Bridgeport Post
ran a large photo of the bride on its wedding page. The photo's caption
read: "Mrs. David Arthur Steeves." Along with its obituary listings, a
paper's wedding page was a popular must-read section for
community-minded Americans -- though perhaps not quite as popular as
another section many papers ran back then: It listed the names of men
and women petitioning for divorce. Divorce carried a stigma of scandal
and failure, so it was shocking and fun to see who'd made the list.
There were changes in the air, though. Two years earlier, Playboy magazine
had hit the newsstands. Now, its gorgeous "girl-next-door" centerfolds
graced military quarters, frat houses, and provided adolescent boys
(those who got their hands on the magazine) with unending entertainment.
However, it would be several years before Hugh Hefner's "Playboy
Philosophy" became apart of America's values and mores. As for the
"Pill," it would be several more years before it become widely
available.
Early in July, the newly married couple said their goodbyes and set out for
the long drive to Big Springs, Texas, home to Webb Air Force Base, where
David would start his Air Force career as a rookie pilot. They must
have felt confident and happy as they pulled onto Connecticut's Merritt
Parkway, sped along the modern tree-lined highway and crossed New York's
state line 30 minutes later. Young and in love, they were from solid
middle-class homes, possessed the values and self-discipline that would
enable them to succeed in the nation's expanding economy.
Now, they were off on a wonderful adventure, were starting new lives. David
was about to realize the dream he'd had since he was a kid. And Rita
thought she had a good catch: She'd seen a number of good qualities in
David, she later related: patience, determination, mechanical aptitude,
the ability to achieve difficult goals. He was a handsome former athlete
to boot, having made the varsity football team when he was a freshman.
Rita knew that flying could be dangerous, to be sure. But she loved David:
Flying was what he wanted. In the prosperous part of southwestern
Connecticut where she'd grown up, other pretty and marriage-minded girls
played it smart. They married accountants, corporate lawyers, or
advertising men. Guys like that tended to be stable breadwinners, and
many had well-paying jobs in New York City. They took the train to work
from any of the towns in Fairfield County dotting the rail line. And in
the early evening, their wives could always count on seeing them again,
tired and hungry after a long day, and usually a very routine one. It
was nothing like the life of an Air Force wife -- especially one married
to a pilot.
Within a few hours, the couple had skirted past New York City on busy traffic
arteries, had put New Jersey and Maryland behind them. Then they arrived
in Virginia, and were heading into the Deep South, a road trip of
1,400-plus miles to Big Springs, Texas. They would never forget that
journey. Ahead lay a lifetime filled with promise and, they hoped,
children. Rita had to wonder if she might already be pregnant.
Besides America's optimism, something else was in the air that that July -
music. Radio stations were playing songs throbbing with energy and
self-confidence, songs that were uniquely American and destined to be
classics.
Steeves could steer casually with his left hand, keeping his right hand on the
radio dial and tuning in one great song after another, including "Rock
Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets. In mid-July it soared
to No. 1 on the charts, becoming the first Rock N' Roll song to do so.
Chuck Barry's hard-charging "Maybellene" also was out, its lyrics
describing a heart-stopping drag race and an unfaithful woman. And there
was Fats Domino's melodious number about lost love, "Ain't that a
Shame," another song future generations would cherish.
Now and then, one of those sharp Corvettes flashed past - a snazzy two-seat
sports car that Chevrolet started producing two years earlier. Someday,
David knew, he'd own a car like that. He wouldn't always be making the
salary of an Air Force 2nd lieutenant. He'd be getting his piece of
America's postwar prosperity, too.
The couple drove mostly on two-lane roads, now known as secondary roads,
because there were no interstate highways in 1955. Occasionally, the
black-topped highway went through small towns or past a cluster of
motels, restaurants and dinners. Huge billboards loomed over the highway
on long empty stretches.
A year later in 1956, Congress gave birth to America's network of
interstate highways, a massive public works project championed by
President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The president had more than commerce in
mind when proposing the system, formally known as the Dwight D.
Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways. During a
national emergency, the highways could facilitate the movement of troops
and military supplies. Steeves, as an Air Force pilot, could easily
guess at another benefit - an escape route from America's cities in the
event of an impending nuclear Armageddon.
The possibility of such a nightmare was hard to escape: One year earlier,
civil defense officials carried out Operation Alert for the first time
in scores of major cities. On the day of the drill, citizens facing a
simulated nuclear attack were required to take cover in 15 minutes.
On their long drive, no franchise restaurants were to be found: McDonald's
and Kentucky Fried Chicken, the earliest franchises, were just starting
up. But David and Rita found plenty of roadside dinners and
restaurants, and when they stopped at one, they could see their future:
Lots of young families at the booths and tables. Moms and dads were on
their summer vacations with their kids: "baby boomer" kids born in the
postwar years.
The Steeves could giggle at the strange headgear many kids wore -- coonskin
caps. Despite the Cold War, America was in the midst of a fad: Millions
of kids wore coonskin caps that summer -- or they were begging their
parents to buy them a coonskin cap, which originally were fashioned from
a racoon's pelt and tail.
Months earlier, the craze took off when the popular Disneyland television
program aired a three-part show based on the life of frontiersman Davy
Crockett. Kids loved the Crockett character played by folksy actor Fess
Parker, and they couldn't stop whistling and humming the catchy theme
song, "The Ballad of Davy Crockett." By contemporary standards, the song
was as corny as could be. In today's post-modern America, most
intellectuals and academics would surely ridicule lyrics being told
about an old Indian fighter who died at the Battle of the Alamo, a song
that noted he had
"Fought single-handed through many a war/ Till the enemy was whipped and peace
was in store." But in the summer of 1955, "The Ballad of Davy Crockett"
was a hit, and on long drives kids in the back seat perked up when it
played on the radio.
Nobody would have thought it then, but the song's confident lyrics and folksy
melody suggested much about America -- suggested that Americans, for
whatever their faults, possessed bedrock qualities that would see them
through any challenge they faced, at home or abroad. The opening stanza
went:
Born on a mountain top in Tennessee
The greenest state in the land of the free
Raised in the woods so's he knew ev'ry tree
Kilt him a b'ar when he was only three
Davy, Davy Crockett, king of the wild frontier
Like other crazes in the 1950s, the coonskin cap fad ran its course; and
while some claimed the craze could endanger the nation's raccoon
population, their concerns never materialized. To ordinary Americans,
such fads were good clean fun -- a diversion from Cold War tensions and
the worries of everyday life.
To the Soviet Union's communist leaders, on the other hand, America's fads
over coonskin caps and the hula hoop (a craze three years later)
reinforced their conviction that America was a hopelessly decadent
nation - one that would be easily defeated by the Soviet Union and its
ideology. In one sense, the Soviet's critique on such fads were
revealing; for it was not directed at America's government and its
policies - but at American society and culture as a whole.
Soviet leaders, at the time time, also could be counted on to overlook
America's substantiative accomplishments. The Steeves, for instance,
would soon have a child that would never face the prospect of being
crippled by polio, whose periodic outbreaks terrified Americas as it
struck tens of thousands of children. In 1955, a vaccine against polio
became available, thanks to the work of Dr. Jonas Salk -- the son of
Russian-Jewish immigrants: people who preferred America's freedoms to to
Soviet Union's drab and often cruel authoritarianism in which millions
of political prisoner's died in prison camps or "gulags" under Joseph
Stalin.
In their disdain for America's culture, Soviet leaders revealed that they
knew little about their American advisories -- men like David Steeves
and his fellow pilots, who proved their mettle every time they climbed
into a jet. Nor did they know much about the wives of such men, women
known in the 1950s as "Air Force wives".
In Big Springs, the couple found a basement apartment; it was all they
could afford. Soon, Rita knew she was pregnant. David was happy to hear
it. He was sure it would be a boy; it could not be possibly anything
else. "It could be a girl," Rita responded. But David refused to even
consider the possibility. She'd have a boy, period.
Besides planning for her baby, Rita now had to adjust to military life. Like
other newly arrived Air Force wives, she could expect a visit from a
member of the base's Wives Club -- a member know as "spotter." Her job
was to track down new Air Force families, welcome them, and then help
them adjust to their new surroundings. Among other things, newly arrived
Air Force wives were invited to get-acquainted meetings and functions
organized by the Wives Club.
On Air Force bases, wives clubs were high-energy versions of America's
public-spirited associations and groups -- its vibrant civil society:
everything from the PTA, to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, to Little
League baseball. The success of America's great experiment was in part
due to its healthy civil society, according to pro-American Frenchman
Alexis de Tocqueville, writing in his seminal book "Democracy in
America" published in 1835.
Attending a meeting of the wives club at Webb Air Force base, Rita Steeves could
enjoy tea, snacks, and be made to feel welcome. The chairman of one
wives club ("chairwoman" and "chairperson" were not being used then) had
a unique way of introducing new Air Force wives. She handed out note
cards that stated:
Will you please give you name, your original home, your last station and
your present address? NOTE: How did you meet your husband? Romantic
or unusual? Funny?
Afterward, two judges decided who told the most amusing, romantic, or original accounts. Prizes were awarded to the winners.
Such functions and social graces were described in a popular book written
for new Air Force wives like Rita Steeves - a book appropriately titled:
"The Air Force Wife." Published in 1951, the 362-page book was intended
to explain the Air Force's customs and traditions, according to author
Nancy Shea, a Kentucky native who'd been married 22 years to a career
Air Force pilot.
Devoting considerable space to what the wives of pilots might expect, Shea
observed that pilot's needed supportive and caring wives who could
understand their typically problematic personalities. "Aviators are
often temperamental so be prepared to adjust your social and home life
to your husband's vocation," she wrote. "Such adjustments are vital and
necessary to his flying; early in your marriage you will find that they
pay off in making for contentment and real happiness".
Observing that "domestic troubles" may well have distracted many pilots and led
to fatal accidents, Shea advised wives to take charge of all domestic
responsibilities and create happy homes:
The pilot's actions at the controls must be instinctive, quick,
subconscious; his judgment in an emergency must be perfect. His
mind cannot be disturbed by worry over unpaid bills, the tensions of
making it home for a party or 'bust,' or news phoned him by an
unthinking wife that Johnny fell out of the tree-house and broke his
arm. The arm will heal, but a mistake on the part of a pilot may claim
the lives of many.
Touching on the positives and negatives of Air Force life, Shea assured fellow
wives that they will have "truly lived" after ten years in the service.
They will have attended more then a few funerals for pilots killed in an
accidents. And they will have endured sleepless nights of "bleak
terror" and "wretched anxiety" -- while fretting for their husbands when
they were flying in bad weather or when on a "fruitless search" for a
fellow pilot whose plane went down. For an Air Force wife, home might be
a quonset hut on Okinawa, a trailer in Alaska, or a castle on the
Rhine, Shea noted.
She assured readers it was only natural to worry about their husbands when
they were flying. But she urged them to keep their worries to
themselves, to have a stiff upper lip. "Dawn usually brings relief from
these unjustified worries, and, of course, no true Air Force wife would
ever think of admitting them even to herself, let alone her husband. It
just isn't done".
Among other things, she noted that Air Force wives needed to accommodate
their husbands' odd and demanding schedules; their frequent
reassignments to other bases; and the inevitable dangers they might
face. It was simply part of military life because for a military man,
"duty comes first -- before family, home ties or anything else," she
wrote.
Throughout her book, Shea presupposed that men and women had specific roles and
responsibilities to fill in a marriage -- and this was especially the
case for the wives of Air Force men.
Apart from the sacrifices and hardships of Air Force life, Shea assured
future brides that marrying an Air Force man was something special, that
there would indeed be many good times for them. In a letter she wrote
to two young women about to marry Air Force men (which she published in
her book) she elaborated on how just special it would be, and she
offered some advice about married life, too.
Her letter revealed much about the 1950s -- about concepts of marriage that
existed at the time; and about the roles that responsible young men and
women were expected to assume. Shea wrote:
My Dear Janet and Judy:
So each of you has met your twentieth-century Prince Charming and instead
of the legendary approach on a white charger, he arrives in a jet! There
is an indefinable thrill in waiting at the flying field for the man in
your life to land. United States Air Force officers and airman today
represent the cream of American manhood; they are the finest cross
section of young men drawn from every state in the Union; and to you,
the man for whom you are waiting represents everything desirable in
life.
Be prepared, though, my darlings - fliers are a peculiar
breed of man. Your love will always have to be shared with his love of
flying. Neither of the Wright Brothers ever married, and when Orville
was questioned on this point he replied that he could not afford both a
plane and a wife.
In a past era it was sufficient and a man was
flattered if the beautiful girl of his choice was a good listener.
Today, a man wants not only an attentive listener but also an
intelligent one. This is particularly true of career airmen and
professional Air Force officers. Your fiancée will think you are
something rather special if you can listen attentively and also
punctuate the conversation occasionally and casually with a pertinent
air-minded remark.
The best way to do this is to read and to
build up an aviation background. Just to get you off to a good start, I
shall list five books on military aviation at the end of this letter.
Above all, never show off your aviation knowledge. Your study must be
sincere, no pretense, or your sins will find you out and embarrass you.
As an Air Force wife you are in for an interesting, exciting life with
plenty of thrills because life in the Air Force is thrilling. Men who
fly love it, and every wife is pound of her flying husband, his wings
and what they represent.
Good luck to you both and happy landings!
Nancy Brinton Shea
The woman reading Shea's book were mostly from the generation to which
David and Rita Steeves belonged; they'd been kids during World War II.
Conversely, Shea's generation had fought that war.
Whatever differences may have separated the two generations in 1955 or were
starting to separate them, they were in total agreement on one thing.
They took for granted that America was on the right side of history.
Both presumed that America was a shining beacon for the world, even if
it was not yet perfect, even if it remained a work in progress.
Both generations believed something else when looking upon the world. There
was such a thing as evil. Not only were they unafraid to use that word,
they felt they could recognize the manifestations of evil, knew the
shape and hue of the cloudbursts of war or similar outrages. "Wars
seldom begin all at once; they are a series of incidents or buildups, or
annexations of smaller countries by cold-war tactics," Shea observed.
Like many in the early 1950s, Shea was hopeful that the newly created United
Nations would establish an "international police system," as she called
it, one that would "do something about a big nation that starts
murdering a small nation." Lacking such a system, America and its allies
would have to go it alone in a brutish world.
Chapter 2.
Something Exploded
"The machine does not isolate man from the great problems of nature but
plunges him more deeply into them".
--Antoine de Saint-Exupery, "Wind, Sand, and Stars" (1939)
The sky was hazy and overcast at Oakland Municipal Airport that Thursday, May 9, 1957. First
Lt. David A. Steeves, 23, taxied his silver T-33 Shooting Star onto the
runway. He stopped the howling jet on the dashed white centerline. He
looked out his bubble canopy, staring at the long runway in front of
him.
A rated T-33 flight instructor, Steeves had logged 900-plus
flying hours since receiving his pilot's wings two year earlier. With
all that flying time, he must have felt confident as he completed his
checklist. He flipped down his helmet's dark sun visor and tugged at his
oxygen mask to make sure it was secure. On the metal knee-pad holding
his navigational log, he jotted down his take-off time: 11:43 a.m.
There was nothing else to do now that he was cleared for take-off. Slowly, he
eased the throttle forward and eyeballed the engine gages. The whining
tubojet engine spooled up, and within a few heartbeats, was emitting an
ear-splitting howl.
The T-33 quickly accelerated as Steeves
released the brakes, raced down the runway and then shot effortlessly
into the sky. Its ear-splitting roar reverberated across the airport.
The jet quickly disappeared into the haze, trailing a black wispy cloud
of exhaust.
In 1957, jets were flown almost exclusively by the
military, and they were seldom seen at most civilian airports. So the
T-33's boisterous take-off would have attracted some attention at
Oakland's airport, where the sounds of piston engines and propellers
were usually heard. Back then, the T-33 and other jets were powered by
the earliest model jet engine, a turbojet. It was disconcertingly loud
compared to the more efficient turbofan jets powering most modern jet
planes.
Two days earlier, Steeves had flown to Oakland from his
home base near Selma, Alabama -- Crag Air Force Base where he lived with
his wife and their 14-month old daughter. He'd spent the night in San
Francisco. Now he was returning home via a route he'd previously flown a
number of times. As usual, he'd make a refueling stop near Phoenix at
Luke Air Force, named after the World War I ace, 21-year-old Frank Luke,
who was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.
Now, Steeves pointed the nose toward Fresno and darted through a few layers of broken clouds
starting at 8,000 feet. Climbing at some 5,000-feet per minute, he soon lost
sight of most landmarks because of the haze and layers of clouds beneath
him. To navigate, he relied on radio navigation facilities, and he
deduced his position based on his estimated ground speed; what pilots
call "dead reckoning" -- short for deduced reckoning. His eyes drifted
to the altimeter as he anticipated the moment he'd start to ease the
nose down for level flight.
Nimble and fast, the T-33 was a
pleasure to fly for pilots. It was the world's first jet trainer, a
two-seat version of a single-seat fighter jet called the P-80 Shooting
Star. First produced in 1948, the T-33 was designed by Lockheed's
legendary aircraft designer Kelly Johnson and his "Skunk Works" team at
the company's Burbank, Calif. plant. It proved itself a durable design.
The U.S. Air Force used it until 1987, and some of the world's air
forces continue to fly it.
It took Steeves about seven minutes to
reach his cruising altitude of 33,500 feet. Leveling off, he adjusted
his power, trimmed the jet, and tuned in radio beacons to navigate. Only
military jets regularly flew at such altitudes in 1957. Thousands of
feet below, the nation's airlines still operated piston-engine
airplanes, DC-6s and Constellations. The golden age of passenger jets
was a few years away.
Like other Air Force pilots, Steeves
trained regularly to keep his skills razor-sharp. Pilots trained until
their could fly their aircraft effortlessly, instinctively. That freed
up more mental energies to utilize on outwitting and destroying the
enemy.
__________________
America was at peace in the later part of the 1950s. But thanks to the Cold
War's hair-trigger tensions, military pilots did, in fact, occasionally
find themselves in combat or being shot at. That was all too obvious to
Steeves and his fellow military pilots.
Months after Steeves started his flight training, U.S. Navy pilots found themselves in a
dogfight over the South China Sea. On July 26, 1954, two U.S. Navy
Skyraiders -- hardy propeller-driven attack planes -- circled over
American vessels that were searching for survivors of a British Cathay
Pacific DC-4. Four days earlier, Chinese communist pilots had shot it
down, claiming they mistook it for a plane from nationalist Taiwan.
Suddenly, the Skyraider pilots were jumped by Chinese pilots flying
Soviet-designed World War II-era fighters, Lavochkin La-7 Fins. A
dogfight ensued over international waters. Two other Navy planes joined
the brawl, and the Chinese planes were shot down.
In America, the incident provoked outrage. Newspapers were not second-guessing
Washington's version of what had happened, and nor were they using
morally neutral language to describe the enemy, as is now the
journalistic standard. "Commies Attack Americans On Search Mission,"
read the headline of an Associated Press story that ran in a Virginia
newspaper -- and a sub-head added: "Fighters From Carriers Suffer No
Casualties -- Washington To Protest Communist Brutality." China later
apologized to Britain for the attack that claimed ten lives, including
three Americans. Eight people survived.
Four months later, as Steeves and fellow pilots were in flight training in Texas, another
aerial incident shocked the nation. On November 27, 1954, Soviet MiG-15
jet fighters shot down a U.S. B-29 making a reconnaissance flight off
the cost of northern Japan near Hokkaido Island. The B-29's 11 crewmen
bailed out; ten survived and one drowned after becoming entangled in his
parachute lines.
Eight months later, as David and Rita Steeves were settling in at Webb Air Force Base,
an Israeli El Al Constellation
airliner strayed into communist Bulgaria's airspace on July 27, 1955--
and a trigger-happy anti-aircraft battery promptly shot down the
four-engine airplane. Fifty-eight passengers and crew died, including 12
Americans. Western officials expressed outrage over the attack, and
Bulgaria's government later expressed "regret" over the incident.
They were among hundreds of incidents in non-combat areas involving civilian
and military aircraft from all sides during the Cold War. To military
pilots, it underscored that they were in the front-lines of the
ideological standoff -- and thus it was imperative for them to keep
their flying skills sharp through constant training.
Of course, they also had to avoid an accident when training; that was obvious from
the Air Force's appalling accident statistics in the 1940 and 1950s. The
accident rate reflected the state of aviation technology and training
of the era. And there was another problem - the culture that existed
among combat pilots. The Air Force wanted to produce aggressive combat
pilots, the kind who were exemplified by veteran test pilot and World
War II ace Chuck Yeager, who in the mid-1950s was commanding Air Force
squadrons in Germany and France. But the devil-may-care attitude this
culture created led many military pilots to take unnecessary risks --
and this inevitably led to unnecessary accidents in peacetime. Even
during routine flights, it could be hard to get fighter pilots to fly
with the safety-conscious prudence of an airline pilot.
_________________
Steeves, alone at 33,500 feet, could relax a
bit at cruising altitude, slicing through the thin air at 450 mph, the
turbojet engine whining in his ears. In cruise flight there were fewer
cockpit chores to do, and statistically it was the safest phase of
flight. He was still busy, though -- scanning gages, tuning in
navigation frequencies, anticipating his next checkpoint. But not so
busy that he could take a moment to enjoy the view from 33,500 feet,
perhaps contemplating the aesthetic qualities of an unusual cloud: its
billowy shape, the way it caught the sunlight. Or he could consider his
earthbound life, and there was one thing about that life knew that he
knew all too well. It was far more complex than any jet he'd ever fly.
A lot had happened to him in the past two years. He'd gotten his pilot's
wings, married his high school sweetheart, and in a little more than
nine months they'd produced a baby girl. Since then, they'd moved out of
their basement apartment. Now, they lived in a mobile home in an
on-base trailer park area of Craig Air Force Base.
And something else also had happened during the past year: He'd met another woman. She
lived in San Francisco, and thanks to his training flights to Oakland
he'd been visiting her. No doubt, being with was a wonderful escape
from the modest accommodations he shared with Rita, an escape from the
trails of fatherhood and Air Force life.
Yet he loved Rita, too.
And it Iwas hard to keep anything from her. Six months earlier, back in
early November, he'd told her all about the affair. She'd cried. She
threatened to leave him. Her reaction hurt him. Since then, he kept
promising to break off the affair, but he had yet to do it. It had put a
cloud over their marriage.
But weeks before this last flight,
Steeves had promised to end things on this last training flight, for
Rita was ready to leave him. He failed to keep that promise, though: He
just couldn't leave his mistress in tears.
Now, flying home at 450 mph, Steeves knew he'd have to tell Rita something. Otherwise, there
would be big trouble; Rita had been as understanding as any woman could
possibly be. Steeves was mechanically inclined and full of courage. Yet
for him personal relationships were far more complex and vexing than
any jet he might ever fly.
If his personal life was confusing,
Steeves could at least take some satisfaction in one thing. He'd become a
pilot during an exciting time. Opportunities for military and civilian
aviation were boundless. The airlines were expanding rapidly. Badly in
need of pilots in 1957, some were soliciting applicants for co-pilot
positions by running ads in Flying magazine, the popular aviation
publication. Young men need only have private pilot's licenses, if that,
to be considered for training programs leading to the cockpit.
Aviation records were being set. On July 16, 1957, a Marine Corp major named
John Glenn, the future senator and astronaut, set a transcontinental
speed record, flying an F8U Crusader fighter jet from California to New
York in 3 hours, 23 minutes, and 8 seconds. The following January, three
B-52s set a record making round-the-world flight, underscoring the
reach of America's air power. Months later, Pan American World Airways
made history by becoming the first American airline to use passenger
jets, flying Boeing 707s between New York and Paris.
The glamorous jet age was about to start - a period when airline travel was for the
affluent and members of the well-mannered and comfortable middle-class.
___________________
About 30 minutes after take-off,
Steeves was streaking over the Sierra Nevada mountains, following an air
route defined by radio beacons. Below him, a fluffy lawyer of clouds
stretched to the horizon. It hid any trace of the earth or the mountains
that he knew were there. Despite the lack of landmarks, Steeves knew
his position based on radio fixes and his estimated ground speed. At
this point on his route, he on a clear day would see the Pacific Ocean
on his right, shimmering in the sunlight beyond his jet's tip tanks. To
his left would be the Sierra Nevada mountains, dominated by Mount
Whitney towering 14,495 feet above sea level. It was the roughest
terrain in the continental United States.
A few minutes south of
Fresno, Steeves made a routine radio call to report his position, but he
failed to respond to a controller's query regarding his flight. He'd
given an estimated time of arrival for his next checkpoint, Wheeler
Ridge.
And after that - silence. Nobody heard from Steeves again.
Not until 53 days later when he stumbled upon four campers in the
wilderness -- weeks after the Air Force had declared him dead.
Toward the end of 1957, after resigning from the Air Force under a cloud of
suspicion and innuendo, Steeves could ponder a series of fantastic
events. They were among the best and worst in his life.
It had all started in a split second. One minute, he was scanning his
instruments, jotting down the time over various checkpoints. Then,
suddenly, something exploded: It was like a "faint boom," he recalled. A
moment later, he was tumbling in space after ejecting from the jet. He
blacked out after the explosion, he said, but for how long couldn't say.
When he came to, smoke drifted in the cockpit. He felt himself being pulled
against his seatbelt. He moved the control stick, but the jet felt
unresponsive - uncontrollable, he recalled. He felt disoriented,
alarmed. He knew what he must do.
Immediately, he sped through
the life-saving steps he'd memorized and practiced - the procedure to
eject. Sliding his feet off the rudder pedals, he positioned them into
the stirrups by his seat, and then he jettisoned the canopy. It flew
away, and wind roared into the cockpit. Holding his breath, he braced
himself, closed his eyes. Then he fired the ejection trigger. Instantly,
an explosive charge ignited beneath him, propelling his seat upward
into the howling and freezing wind.
He tumbled and fell. And like
many pilots in such situations, he must have wondered if he would die.
Ejection seat technology was relatively new back then. So military
pilots who "punched out" enjoyed none of the confidence of their
counterparts today. They risked breaking arms and legs or suffering
other injuries.
It had been only nine years since a man had
safely ejected from an airplane for the first time. The human guinea
pig, a man named Bernard Lynch, had volunteered to eject from a
high-flying British-built Gloster Meteor fighter over England's
countryside. Lynch worked as a machinist for the seat's designer,
Martin-Baker Aircraft Co., which became a major manufacturer of ejection
seats. Up until 1957, ejection seats had saved a few hundred lives.
They've saved untold numbers of airmen since then, with Martin-Baker's
seats alone having saved more than 7,000, according to the company.
Steeves, free of his seat, plummeted toward the mountains below. As pilots in
such situations later reported, a few images of his life may have raced
across his mind. But his thoughts were clear as he tightly grasped the
D-shaped ring, the ripcord, and pulled it hard. A second later, he felt a
jolt as his parachute opened with a loud crack.
He was alive.
Hanging in space, floating, he looked at what lay below -- a layer of
wispy clouds stretching to the horizon. It would have been a lovely
sight from the safety of his cockpit. Now he thought only of what lay
below, some of the country's toughest terrain -- the snow-capped Sierra
Nevada mountain range. He felt alert yet strangely calm, just like he
always felt in potentially dangerous situations. Invariably, his senses
became focused. The temperature was close to freezing, but with his
adrenalin pumping he hardly noticed.
He'd never ejected or made a
parachute jump but had gotten Air Force lectures on the subjects. Now
they came back to him. He tilted his head to inspect his chute. And
immediately, his eyes froze on two panels of the orange and white chute
-- both were ripped. The explosion must have singed them or maybe they
were damaged when he ejected.
Thank God the rips weren't
spreading. A parachute is constructed out of a number of individual
panels, so a tear in one won't rip across the entire canopy.
Despite the damage, the chute seemed to be working normally. Yet he knew the
rips meant trouble. Two missing panels meant the canopy had less square
area; therefore, he was surely descending at a faster-than-normal rate.
And he was in thin mountain air, descending toward towering mountains
peaks. A parachute landing could be a bone-jarring experience under the
best of circumstances. Now he faced the worst conditions possible.
He dropped into the clouds. And seconds later he emerged to see the earth
below -- the snow-capped mountains he'd seen on clear days from his
high-flying jet. Curiously, he'd neither seen his jet nor heard an
explosion. He thought it was odd. He would think about that later,
though.
The peaks loomed larger by the second as he floated
toward a steep slope. Hundreds of feet below it, he spotted a place
where he would have preferred landing - a snow-covered basin. But he
decided against maneuvering his chute by using the two steering toggles
hanging above his shoulder. Doing so, he feared, might widen the rips in
his canopy, sending him plummeting into the mountainous abyss. He
drifted with the wind, watching as the rocks grow bigger. He was about
100 feet from the slope when to his relief he saw exactly where he'd
land - a big rocky ledge jutting from the mountain slope.
The rocks rushed at him. He landed hard, his leather flying boots hitting
with a thud. Spinning violently, he slammed against the side of the
mountain. He fell flat against the rocky ledge. It was over.
Dazed and breathing rapidly, he realized he was safe, although his legs and
feet felt numb. All in all, the landing was like playing varsity
football -- getting tackled hard by three big guys all at once. He
immediately sat up and unhooked his parachute harness. Thankfully, the
parachute's canopy had collapsed when he landed, so there was no danger
of it dragging him to his death. But a gust of wind could drag him to
his death. Next, he flipped up his helmet's visor. He surveyed his
surroundings from his rocky perch, and his sense of calm returned.
Breathing normally again, he looked up. The chute was tangled in in rocks and ice
just above him. He tugged at the lines. The canopy wouldn't budge.
unable to budge the canopy. He knew he must retrieve it; use it to keep
warm until a rescue party arrived. And he presumed a rescue party would
arrive quickly. Surely, somebody saw the jet go down or heard the
explosion. It was too dreadful to think anything else. After all, he had
no survival kit. It was lost when he ejected. And he wore only summer
clothing: a summer flight jacket and flight suit, plus the T-shirt and
undershorts he had on underneath. He also wore his tough leather flight
boots, wool socks, and his thin leather flying gloves. In a pocket was a
wool cap.
It was surreal. Some 40 minutes ago, he'd taken off on
a routine flight from Oakland. Now he was sitting on an ice-covered
mountain. Where was he? He he could only guess because he had no way of
knowing how long he'd been unconscious. So it was impossible to know
how much time elapsed between the explosion and his ejection. Lacking
that variable, he could not calculate the distance the jet had traveled
before he ejected, and so he could only guess at where he might be. The
jet could have flown 13 to 20 miles during the two to three minutes he'd
been uncon 13 to 20 miles.
All he knew for certain was that he'd
dropped into the southern Sierra Nevada. Utterly wild and forbidding,
it boasted the continent's deepest canyons and mountains, not to
mention its biggest trees -- giant sequoias as wide as a small house.
Over the years, the park and national forest had acquired a dubious
distinction, too: Its most remote and inaccessible areas contained
untold numbers of aircraft wrecks. Some had yet to be located. They
still contained the remains of their pilots and passengers -- or what
was left of them after scavenging animals got to the bodies.
Steeves, collecting his thoughts, started to think things through, form a plan.
Until a rescue party arrived, he had to face reality and do certain
things. First, he took an inventory of his gear, digging through the
pockets of his jacket and flight suit. He had no maps. His charts had
blown away when he ejected, and so had his pocket-sized New Testament
and pipe tobacco. He had his pipe, though.
Poking thorugh various
pockets, he pulled out a comb and nail clippers, pens and pencils, and a
case containing his sunglasses. He also pulled out a small disk-shaped
device -- a "Radia Detecto" -- that was used to measure radioactivity in
the event of a nuclear exchange. He also pulled out several packs of
matches: a box of wooden ones he used to light his pipe, and two books
of paper matches that were part of his makeshift emergency gear, which
he carried to supplement his survival kit.
Opening his slim
wallet, he thumped through its contents: driver's license, Social
Security card, a dollar bill. In the wilderness, the Social Security
card and dollar bill might actually have some value - serving as
kindling for a fire. The most precious things, though, were four photos
of Rita. Steeves lingered over them a moment. He stuffed the wallet into
a deep pocket.
Steeves for the moment could only be certain of
one thing, the fate awaiting Rita. In a few hours, she'd hear a knock on
the door. She'd open it to find a a grim-faced Air Force officer, maybe
even the base commander. The chaplain probably wouldn't be with him
because he wasn't officially dead, just missing.
How would Rita
react? Some pilot's wives collapsed into tears, got utterly hysterical.
But at least Rita had some good friends to console her. Thinking about
Rita, he recalled when a fellow pilot and next-door-neighbor, Lt. Glen
Sutton, went missing the previous February. He and Capt. Paul Omann
disappeared over the Sierra Nevada in a T-33. A search failed to turn up
any trace of them.
Steeves glanced at one of his boots, the one
where he carried a small butcher knife and a loaded six-shot .32 Allen
and Hopkins revolver -- a gift from his grandfather years ago. They were
tucked in sheath that a shoemaker had stitched into the tough leather.
It was after Glen Sutton disappeared that he'd decided to add the
revolver and knife to the Air Force's survival kit that he'd carried --
and that he lost when he ejected.
He needed to find shelter,
someplace where the bone-chilling wind could not find him. Surveying the
mountain slope below him, he spotted a promising spot a few hundred
feet beneath him. It was in the snow-covered basin he'd seen during his
descent.
Hunkered on his rocky perch, he stared fixedly at the
basin's minute details and, specifically, at what might serve as a
makeshift shelter - a rock and two withered trees, one of which one had
split and fallen. They were next to a cove of sorts, as he later
described it. There, he thought, he might find shelter, stay put until a
search party found him. That's what he had to think for now -- a search
party would indeed be arriving. Maybe not today. But maybe in two or
three days.
Now, he turned his attention to retrieving his
parachute tangled in the rocks above him. it would be the blanket that
would keep him alive. It was in a precarious spot. He could tumble to
his death if he is lost his balance when easing up the rocks to retrieve
it. But without it, he knew he would die.
Slowly, deliberately,
he studied where to put his hands and feet as he started to crawl up the
rocks. He reached the chute after several minutes. Carefully, he
untangled the mess of lines and then eased himself back to the safety of
his perch. He'd never done any rock climbing until then. It had been a
learning experience.
After catching his breath, he sat on his
perch and surveyed the basin below him, pondering what to do next. He
got up on both knees and gathered up the parachute after a few minutes.
He bundled it into a tight ball -- the seat, harness, backpack, and
canopy. Then he stood up and hurled it upwards and outwards over the
rocky slope below him. Bouncing and skipped crazily, it accelerated
faster and faster as it tumbled down the slope, stirring up tiny
avalanches of rocks and dirt.
Watching its every bounce, Steeves
no doubt imagined himself in the place of the bundle, for that's what
would happen to him if he lost his footing and fell. He had to risk it,
though. Otherwise he'd die of exposure on on the cold wind-blown perch.
The bundle stopped abruptly near where the mountain's slope flattened out.
That's where Steeves would go next. And from there he'd go further down
the mountain, down an even steeper slope, until he got to the basin and
the make-shift shelter by the little cove.
After an hour, the sky
was growing increasingly overcast, the sun hidden by the gray cloud
deck that he'd dropped through during his parachute descent. He studied
the safest way to ease himself down the slope abutting his rocky abode.
He decided to go down face first, just like a mountain climber would,
feeling his way along the rocky slope. He lay face down and eased
himself over the edge of he perch. Carefully, he eased himself down the
mountain slope.
With the tips of his boots, he stabbed and dug at
the rocks and earth, creating footholds that he used to anchor himself.
Then clawed out holes for his hands. And so he inched his way down the
steep mountain slope.
Steeves paused often as he made his way
down. As he rested, he again studied the safest path to take. Soon, the
thin leather of his flying gloves had worn through at the fingertips,
and he felt his fingers go numb. It was cold, probably close to
freezing. But he kept digging and working his way down the slope. The
combination of physical exertion and adrenalin in his veins made the
cold tolerable.
Tedious and nerve-wracking, the descent took
hours. When he finally reached the parachute bundle he stopped and
rested, sitting on the snow-covered earth and rocks.
He stook up after catching his breath. Bending over, he reached for his parachute
bundle, but his hands never touched it. Suddenly, without warning, an
intense jolt of pain shot through his ankles. He fell to the ground. He
sat there, dazed. To his horror, he was unable to stand because of the
pain. For the first time, he realized he'd been badly hurt during the
hard parachute landing.
Had he sprained his ankles? Or was
something broken? Clasping his leather boots in his hands, he felt and
prodded around his ankles. He couldn't tell if any bones were broken,
however.
To his growing horror, Steeves now realized he might die
in this lonely snow-covered spot. Overhead, the clouds were lowering.
Soon, no search plane would be able to fly below the clouds hugging the
ground.
He told himself to be calm. But whatever he did, he knew
he'd have to do it soon, before the temperature dropped with the sunset.
Somehow, he had to get himself and his bundled parachute down the steep
slope to the basin -- and then over to the makeshift shelter by the
little cove.
Deep in thought, he stared intently at the slope in
front of him. He had an idea: He'd use his parachute's seat cushion as a
sled. He unbundled it, then pulled out the seat cushion and wrapped up
the parachute canopy. Sitting atop the seat cushion, he took the leg
straps in both hands, drawing them up between his legs.
Then he began to slide down the slope, his feet spread in front of him; and
despite his pain, he was able to carefully dig his heels into the earth
to control his descent. Occasionally, the parachute's canopy unfurled
behind him as he slide along. And so he had to stop, crawled back up
the slope, and gather up the parachute. Then he started down the slope
again.
The sunlight was fading by the time he arrived at the
snow-covered basin. He tried to stand up, but again the pain forced him
to sit on the parachute seat. His left ankle hurt the most. Obviously,
he'd have to crawl to the little cove. Trying to keep the pressure off
his left ankle, he crawled by using his two hands, his left knee, and
right foot. He dragging his parachute along as he crawled slowly to the
little cove.
Reaching it, he knelled in the snow. He saw that a
big snow drift had built up around two small pine trees standing about
10 to 12 feet tall. One had snapped in two, wedging itself against the
other. He decided he'd build a snow cave around the stump of the fallen
pine.
Digging with both hands, he made a space big enough for
himself. His hands felt numb and cold when he was done. He pushed the
parachute's seat cushion and back pad inside - and then he crawled into
his new home. Over the cave's opening, he spread the parachute's canopy.
Lying in the dim light on the back pack and seat cushion, he took off his
crash helmet and pulled his cap from a pocket. He put the cap on,
pulling its flaps over his ears; and then he put his helmet back on.
Next, he pulled down the helmet's visor and snapped the dangling oxygen
mask across his face just like he'd done hundreds of times before
take-off.
It was getting dark and cold. He knew he'd have to
start a fire to survive the night. He took out his butcher knife. He
hacked a few pieces of wood from the rotting stump next to him that
supported the fallen tree leaning over his head. Then he stuffed the
wood into a hole in the stump.
Using his flight clearance papers
as kindling, he lite a tiny, smoldering fire with the papers and damp
rotting wood. He could only hope the fire generated enough heat to keep
him from freezing. It was all he could do as he lay with his feet
against the smoldering stump.
Despite all his work, he knew he
might die that night. People facing death or extreme danger often see
their lives more clearly, find it easier to realize what is really
important to them. And in his little snow cave that night, the same
thing happened to Steeves. In spite of his religious upbringing, he had
not until then regarded himself as being extremely religious; and nor
was he a man who engaged in much self-reflection. But that night, he
prayed with all his heart; and for the first time, he reflected
seriously on his shortcomings -- and particularly on how he'd failed
Rita and their daughter.
Rita had loved and trusted him with all
his heart, thought he'd always protect her since they'd met when they
were juniors in high school; and he'd returned that love with conduct
that was selfish and self-centered, he realized as never before.
It was a revelatory night, his night in the snow cave, as he prayed and
reexamined his life; and after the scandal that eventually enveloped
him, he related some of his 54-day survival experience to newspapers.
But the the most soul-searching account was detailed in his interview
with Redbook magazine, an article that portrayed him as both a hero and
flawed man. It was fair and accurate, Steeves later said; but by that
time, nobody believed him -- and that included Rita.
That night, shivering and praying in the snow cave, Steeves had know idea that Rita
had, in fact, already made up her mind to leave him. Both of them needed
a separation, she'd decided, at least until David made some changes.
She'd planned to move out out by the time he returned from his three-day
training flight.
______________
Minutes after air traffic controllers lost radio communication with Steeves,
they suspected something was amiss. Two hours later, it was obvious the
jet had gone down. It had failed, after all, to arrive for its scheduled
refueling stop at Luke Air Force Base. Nor had a T-33 with tail number
"52-9232A" landed anywhere else.
Within a few hours, two Air
Force search-and-rescue planes overflew the short route of the missing
T-33 -- just 67 miles from Oakland to the point where controllers last
spoke with Steeves. However, no trace of the T-33 or its pilot were
found. By then it was too late in the afternoon to start a full-scale
search. The next morning, however, pilots from a search-and-rescue
squadron were poised to scour the Sierra Nevada in search of the missing
Air Force jet.
At Craig Air Force Base, base commander Col. Leo
F. Dusard Jr. would hardly have been surprised to hear that one of his
T-33 pilots was missing. A decorated World War II P-38 pilot, Dusard was
well acquainted with the risk inherent in military aviation, both in
wartime and the 1950s. Indeed, at some Air Force bases in the 1950s, it
was not uncommon to see ugly black clouds rising into the sky -- marking
the spot where a jet had just crashed. During the earlier part of the
decade, this was especially so at places such as Nellis Air Force Base
in Las Vegas, Nevada, where training and flight testing was done.
As sirens wailed and fire crews scurried about, something else happened as
the black clouds rose above the base. In the neat rows of on-base
homes, the wives of pilots suddenly peered anxiously out their windows-
their eyes filled with fear and dread. Soon, they knew, the base's
commander and a chaplain might come along: the commander in his blue Air
Force suit, the chaplain in his dark suit and white collar; both of
them walking solemnly past the rows of houses -- their final destination
unknown.
The tension for some was unbearable. Upon seeing the
stern-faced base commander and chaplain appear in their neighborhood,
some women were said to have suddenly run from their windows and front
porches, hiding themselves in some dark corner of their home to postpone
the inevitable.
Something else often happened after a pilot's
wife learned she was a widow. Seconds after the chaplain left, her best
friends poured into her home -- consoling her as she sobbed and kept
repeating that he husband could not be dead; that he'd left the house
not long ago. Some friends stayed with her on a 24-hour basis, helping
with the domestic chores and the children. "There is is no limit to
their true understanding and genuine sympathy, because every Air Force
wife knows that on any day she may suffer a similar loss," Shea related
in "The Air Force Wife".
That afternoon, Col. Dusard told Rita
Steeves her husband was missing. She wept at the news. Like other Air
Force wives, she had put the thought of David dying in a crash out of
her head. But she knew it could happen. After all, it had happened
months earlier to their neighbor, Glen Sutton.
Now, Rita felt herself coming apart emotionally. Yes, there had been problems in their
marriage; but there had been good times, too. Immediately, she phoned
David's parent in Connecticut. They left for Selma the next day,
convinced that David was still alive. Arriving the next evening, they
found their daughter-in-law staying with her next-door-neighbors, Capt.
John and Phyllis Mapa, who lived next to the Steeves in their own
trailer.
Was David alive or dead? Rita could only guess.
Chapter 3. -- Returned to Life
"Time makes heroes but dissolves celebrities." -- Daniel J. Boorstin, "The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America" (1961)
Her husband was dead. After a few weeks, Rita Steeves had no doubt about
that. No trace of him or his jet had been found. She had the death
certificate the Air Force had sent her, too. It arrived in the mail some
three weeks after David disappeared; by that time, she'd left Craig Air
Force Base and was living with her mother and stepfather in Fairfield, a
town near where David's parents lived in a town named Trumbull. "I was
officially a widow," she later related. "I had to start a new life".
Determined to be strong and positive, she enrolled at the University of Bridgeport
with the goal of becoming a teacher. Her father died when she was a
little girl, so she knew something about death. "I knew I must now be
the head of my family - families, I know, can fall apart when there's a
death. I resolved this would not happen to us," she later recalled. Yet her husband was alive and fighting for his life.
Steeves stayed three day in the snow cave. But when no rescue parties arrived,
he decided he had to move on, find his own way back to civilization.
What happened to him during his 54 days in the wilderness would later
become a subject of debate and speculation, much of it stirred up by the
same news media that had initially greeted him as a hero. Even his
wife, already upset over his infidelity, had to wonder about what the
newspapers were suggesting about his wilderness ordeal - what she at one
point called his "adventure in the mountains".
It was hardly what Steeves anticipated when he shambled into the ranger's station on
May 9, 1957. Nor could he have anticipated the media frenzy that erupted
over him - and how soon it would happen.
Moments after he phoned
home, Steeves called the closest air base, Castle Air Force Base in
Merced -- home to the 93rd Heavy Bombardment Group that flew B-52s. A
staff car was on its way, he was told by shocked Air Force personnel: It
would arrive that evening.
Steeves had no chance to relax,
though. Soon, reporters were showing up. Word about the bearded Air
Force pilot who'd wandered in from the wilderness had spread quickly. To
Steeves, they must have seemed like a friendly bunch, the mostly young
reporters from newspapers, wire services, and radio stations. Quickly
introducing themselves, they expressed a word or two of admiration. Then
the questions started. It's not hard to imagine how the afternoon
unfolded for Steeves, who at first wanted to be helpful and friendly:
He at first thought he was having a casual conversation. But as one
question led to another, he quickly realized he was giving formal
interviews. At first he talked to reporters individually -- and later in
small groups as the ranger's station filled up with reporters. For much
of the afternoon, he was giving one interview after another.
Months later, Steeves told Redbook of feeling so emotionally drained by all
the questioning that he excused himself to go to the bathroom - and then
stayed there for an extraordinary long time. His fatigue was evident in
a photo published in Redbook. Appearing tired and withdrawn, he sits on
a couch with his hands folded, gazing downward. At least four reporters
surround him, seated on the couch and kneeling on the floor.
Finally, the staff car arrived. Settling back in the rear seat, Steeves could
relax - chat with the airman at the wheel or be alone with his thoughts -
almost like he'd been 24 hours earlier when he was still lost in the
wilderness. The car speed off on the dark and empty road leading out of
Kings Canyon National Park. On the radio, news spots about him were
already being broadcast. People unfamiliar with the news business are
often amazed at how fast a reporter can get a story into a newspaper or
on a radio or TV broadcast.
Apart from the radio news, Steeves
could listen to some good music, including a tune that came out just
before he ejected, Elvis Presley's "All Shook Up." And a new song had
been released when he was in the wilderness, something from the Everly
Brothers called "Bye Bye Love." He could have related to that song
thanks to his complicated personal life, his problems with Rita. Soon,
he might even be singing the lyrics:
Bye bye love
Bye bye happiness, hello loneliness
I think I´m-a gonna cry
Bye bye love
Bye bye sweet caress, hello emptiness
I feel like I could die
Steeves thought of Rita in the lonely darkness of the staff car - and he knew
he had a lot of explaining to do. In the ranger's cabin, the phone had
rung moments after he'd talked with his mom: It was Rita. She'd pulled
into the driveway right after his mom hung up. Now, she was shocked and
nearly speechless as she spoke to her husband, whom she'd truly believed
was dead.
"Rita," he asked. "Do you still love me?" He still
felt the sting of her response: "I don't know David....I don't think I
can come back."
Rita was onto her husband. Days after he'd gone
missing, she was distraught and crying over him. He might be dead, she
realized. So she tried to cherish her marriage's good memories - and
forget the bad ones.
Then the mail arrived.
Looking at one
letter, Rita gasped at the feminine handwriting. It was from the San
Francisco woman, the one with whom David was having an affair - the
affair he'd ended just before his return flight from Oakland. Or had he
ended it?
Rita stared at the handwriting, puzzled at why the girl
was writing to her. Six months earlier, David had told her all about
the girl -- his affair with her that was facilitated by those "training
flights" to Oakland. And he'd told her everything, too: She knew the
girl's name and what she looked like. She knew some things she wished
David hadn't told her. David had trouble talking seriously to people,
she thought: She was the only person to whom he could truly lay bear his
feelings. And so sometimes, he told her things that husbands don't
ordinarily tell their wives. She knew him better than he knew himself.
The letter brought back bad memories.
...He started out as a flight instructor at Craig, training students
in T-33s. But then he'd had a run-in one of his students -- a captain
who'd questioned his flying judgment. Well, he done a little hot dog
flying; that was all. Everybody did it. But it was his word against a
captain. So naturally he lost that argument. As a result, he'd gotten
reassigned to the maintenance squadron's adjacent.
Well, that was the Air Force for you. Just how screwed up things could be at Craig was
evident to him a year earlier, when he first arrived there. He'd been
all set to instruct in T-33s, but the jets hadn't even arrived! So
instead, he had to instruct on T-6s, lousy prop jobs with those big
rumbling radial engines. He'd let everybody know his low opinion of the
Air Force's efficiency; and later, he wondered if he'd been imprudent
with all that loose talk.
But as he lay in bed skipping over
scraps of his life and marriage, he thought mostly about the past 48
hours. It had been just as weird and surreal as that last ill-fated
flight on May 9th - going in 30 to 40 minutes from Oakland's airport to
33,500 feet, and then parachuting to the rocky perch of an ice-covered
mountain.
Two days ago, early in the morning, he'd been alone in
the wilderness, making yet another attempt to hike to civilization. He'd
been thwarted during earlier attempts by towering canyons and a raging
stream in which he'd nearly drowned. That day, however, he'd hiked
father than he ever had before. He was in good spirits thanks to the
progress he'd made. His badly sprained ankles no longer hurt him much.
Yet he also knew something: He could still die in the wilderness --
suffer an accident or slowly starve to death. He could already see his
ribs. Facing the possibility of his own death, he'd written Rita a
farewell letter. He carried it in a pocket. Hopefully, she'd get it if
somebody found his body.
It was around noon when Steeves decided
to rest after several hours of hiking. Walking to the crest of a gentle
hill, he sat atop a rock. He started to munch on some strawberries he'd
collected, and he wondered about what might happen that day. Suddenly, a
voice startled him -- a woman's voice.
"Hello, there"!
His heart jumped. His looked up, wide-eyed with shock at what was heading
toward him - a woman on horseback. She was ten feet away. He stared and
stammered for a few seconds, too amazed to speak, he later told Redbook.
Behind her were three other riders, two men and a woman.
"Am I glad to see you!" he finally blurted out. The camping party crested the
hill, and he stared in disbelief, his eyes filled with wild expectation.
But the woman rider led her horse right by him, looking down curiously
at him, and perhaps with some concern.
"I've been up here almost
60 days! Steeves went on excitedly. Another rider, a man, went past him
as well. He nodded a greeting at Steeves.
"Have you got any
food?" Steeves implored. Suddenly, he sensed the group was being
cautious. After all, he realized, he looked like some wild man with his
scraggly beard and dirty loose-fitting jump suit. A flash of horror
seized him: The group was about to ride off, leaving him there.
But, no, the party drew their horses up. Steeves watched expectedly. One
of the men dismounted, then walked over to Steeves and introduced
himself. He was Albert Ade, a guide from Squaw Valley, he said. The two
shared tentative handshakes.
Then the others dismounted and
walked over, looking curiously at Steeves, trying to be friendly, though
no doubt being a bit cautions, as Steeves had suspected they were
being. Awkward introductions were exchanged. The other man, Dr. Charles
Howard, said he was a dentist from Fresno. The camping party, the two
men and their wives, enjoyed being the first campers each year to open
the trail in the remote section of Kings Canyon National Park.
Steeves began to excitedly describe everything that had happened to him since
he'd ejected; how he'd made his way down the mountain, had hiked to this
point on the trail. Listening silently, they stared in disbelief at the
wild-looking stranger. He was articulate and had obviously visited the
places he described. As they looked him over, they would have quickly
noticed he was not wearing some off-the-shelf jump suit like a mechanic
might buy. It was an Air Force flight suit. A name tag sewn above the
left pocket read: "1st Lt. Steeves." Amazed, even awed, they quickly
realized the man was who he claimed to be.
Steeves at one point
sensed he was speaking too quickly. His thoughts were racing faster than
he could speak. So he made an effort to talk more slowly as he went
through his story. Again, he asked about food. They told him that, yes,
there was plenty of food, and he was welcome to join them. Ade, the
guide, said they'd be setting up camp a mile up the trail. Tomorrow, he
added, he and Steeves would take two of the horses and ride to a
ranger's station.
Going back to the camp, Mrs. Howard insisted
that Steeves ride on her horse, and she walked cheerfully beside him.
Steeves continued to talk, fascinating the campers with every detail of
his story. Once at the campsite, Mrs. Howard started to retrieve goods
from their supplies, and Steeves gulped down everything she gave him:
cupcakes, a chocolate bar, a box of raisins, an orange. Next, he wolfed
down a half a loaf of rye bread smothered with peanut butter and jelly.
For dinner that evening, Steeves ate a big steak and fried potatoes. Then he ate the portion Dr.
Howard had passed up, after complaining he felt woozy because of the high
altitude. At one point, the campers cautioned Steeves not to eat too
much. He kept eating anyway. His stomach became engorge, as firm as a
drum.
At bedtime, Steeves laid on a bed of saddle blankets.
Snuggling under the covers, he drifted into a deep sleep - one that
abruptly ended early the next morning.
Something was shaking him.
He bolted up, startled. It was the ground, he realized. It was shaking
-- an earthquake or something, just like the strange ominous shaking
that had frightened him a week earlier.
It was no temblor. Later,
Steeves learned the shaking was caused by shock waves rippling across
the region -- the result of a powerful atomic explosion set off at the
Nuclear Test Site in neighboring Nevada. It was the heyday of nuclear
testing. Between April and October, 24 atomic devices were detonated in a
testing program called Operation PLUMBBOB.
After stuffing himself at breakfast, Steeves and Ade mounted horses for the four-hour
ride to the ranger's station, arriving there around noon. That was some
16 hours ago.
Now, lying in bed at Castle Air Force Base, Steeves
thought about the past 48 hours -- the kindness of the campers, the
endless reporters' questions, and of course the phone call with Rita.
Tomorrow, he'd call Rita, find out what she'd decided about their marriage. He
knew he wanted a life with her. However, he couldn't think of Rita
without also thinking of the girl in San Francisco. He'd have to tell
her something, too.
As to the morning news conferences, Steeves
knew it would be a very big deal -- far bigger than the ranger's cabin
interviews, which already had produced front-page headlines in
Connecticut.
When preparing mentally for some flights, Steeves
went through a mental rehearsal of what he'd be doing -- imagining every
detail of the flight. Now, he did the same thing in respect to the news
conference, imagining himself calmly answering questions, telling his
story. It was important to be cool under pressure, whether in the
cockpit of anyplace else. The new conference and Rita were the last
things Steeves thought of before he closed his eyes. He quickly went to
sleep...
Author's Note: This is based on newspaper and magazine articles published in
1957 as well as on a U.S. Air Force accident report obtained through a
Freedom of Information Act Request. Photos are from Redbook's January,
1958 article: "The Survival of Lt. Steeves." Some content was first
published in a magazine article I wrote for the American Thinker and later published at this blog.
________