During the summer of 1998 UAS and company
traveled to Labrador to locate a Boeing B-17 downed on a frozen lake
December 24th, 1947.In addition to location analysis of the wreckage
was performed to determine the feasibility of recovery and restoration.
Robert Mester:
Dear FAMILY AND FRIENDS
You have not heard from me in awhile. I have been in the
backwoods of Northwest Labrador looking for a B-17 W.W.II 4 engine
bomber lost during a forced landing on Dec. 24, 1947. The trip was
great! We found the submerged aircraft in 20 feet of frigid and fast
moving water. We were able to locate the aircraft even though it had
moved over 10 miles from its crash site on Dyke Lake in Labrador. The
aircraft floated on a chunk of ice during the spring ice break-up of
1948. Skill, good equipment, great staff and thorough research made
this location and identification possible. The area is breath taking.
It’s remoteness provided a beauty that I have seen only once before,
the Aleutian chain. It sterility from civilization tend to cleanse the
soul. There were 4 search personnel and 5 project personnel. The
project personnel were the same guys that recovered the P-38 from
Greenland; top-notch people and a pleasure to work with. My team
consisted of Crayton Fenn, Steve Ladd, and Dal Neitzel. Dal is a
video-photographer and produces documentaries, but Crayton Fenn
recruited him as an additional side scan team member when he wasn’t
otherwise busy.
The weather was not bad but
often terrible. Not cold but often freezing. The wind was dead calm,
(and the mosquitoes ate you alive), but very gusty. You can figure out
by now that the weather changes more in this area than I have ever
experienced before. At night the Aurora Borealis was unable to be
described with words, it was mystical and primeval. I shall never lose
the images that night nor forget the spirit it awakened inside me. I
regret not recording the sites on film or digital tape but something
inside told me maybe it is best not to attempt to record or recreate
such an event.
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We arrived on a Tuesday the 29
of July in Labrador a place called Shefferville. This is actually on
Quebec but in Shefferville. We flew the whole expedition in a W.W.II
C-47 restored and owned by Don Brook, Project manager. Once in
Shefferville we reloaded all the equipment into Dehavalian Otters,
these are seaplanes. Then we flew SE to Dyke lake and set up camp at an
old fishing camp no longer in use. This is about 1 mile from the
reported crash site of the B-17 on the frozen lake – December 24th,
1947.By Labrador law we hire two local guides. One is an Inuit Eskimo
named Don Mitsuk, great guy and a real pleasure to be around. The other
guide was Don’s 17-year-old Labbie (Labaradorian) sidekick named Gary.
They fished for our meals and were a great amount of help, cooking,
lifting, and filling the role of local encyclopedia. They were helpful
in all manners.
We spent 8 days in locating and
diving doing video and stills photography to determine if this aircraft
is financially worthy of recovery for restoration. It was a great trip
and I will attach some images from the expedition.
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