Surf City plane crashes, mishaps and tragedies
- Share via
JERRY PERSON
Today is the start of a new year, and I hope all of you made it
through the holidays without an accident and that Santa landed on
your rooftop with lots of presents.
In a past column, we saw how Santa landed on our beach in a modern
airplane, and this week, we are going to look back to three aircrafts
that hit our shores.
The first accident happened on July 17, 1993 while Huntington
Beach resident Ross Willson was soaking up some rays on the beach
near Newland Street.
It was around 11:30 a.m. that a single-winged Cessna airplane
dropped out of the sky and landed midway between the surf line and
the bike trail. It seems that the Cessna developed engine trouble
while towing a Miller Lite beer banner. When the plane began losing
power, pilot Mike Strobe dropped the banner near the Santa Ana River
jetty and headed toward our beach, nearly missing a group of music
lovers partying on the beach.
The Cessna, owned by Tim Hagenbacker and Strobe, had to be
escorted off the beach by two lifeguard jeeps. There is a city
regulation against taking off on the sand. No one was injured in this
accident, thank God.
Our next aviation mishap occurred on a Saturday also, on Oct. 12,
1946. Lawrence Saunders had just rented a Piper Cub plane from the
Martin School of Aviation in Santa Ana and was cruising offshore
around noon when his motor stopped.
The 40-year-old pilot from Olive, Calif., put the plane in a long
downward glide hoping to land on shore. But luck was against
Saunders, and his plane hit the water about 100 yards offshore from
Beach Boulevard. Meanwhile, back on the Huntington Beach Pier,
lifeguard chief Bud Higgins witnessed the accident and with fellow
lifeguards Monte Nitzkowski, Donnie Combs, Robert Hoyt, Robert
Knisley and Fred Swarts, piled into an old truck and headed toward
the plane.
When Higgins and his crew arrived at the scene, the plane was
floating upside down in the water. Higgins and his lifeguard crew
swam over to the plane, only to find it empty. The impact had thrown
the pilot from the plane and into the cold water. The lifeguards
searched and finally spotted the unconscious pilot floating 150 yards
away.
They got Saunders to shore, but he was turning blue and not
breathing. For more than 30 minutes these heroic lifeguards worked to
resuscitate Saunders, and in the end their efforts paid off as life
slowly returned.
Saunders was transported to Dr. Whittaker’s office, where he made
a quick recovery.
On the day of the final featured accident, it had been a beautiful
Sunday on June 27, 1943 as the Barrega and Silva families drove their
seven children from their homes in Garden Grove to enjoy a nice
picnic on our beach. Other families were relaxing with their children
and trying to forget about the war.
The crowd was watching as a formation of Lockheed Lightning P-38
military planes was practicing diving and shooting at a drone towed
by a fifth plane at 4,000 feet.
Suddenly, one of the planes lurched wildly out of formation and
smoke began coming from one of the engines. As children watched,
pilot G.R. Fair bailed out and floated to Earth in his chute.
Fair’s now-pilotless plane started out to sea but turned and began
to circle back toward shore. What happened next can only be described
as “Hell on Earth.”
The P-38 crashed near the water’s edge about a half-mile from the
pier in a blinding flash that sprayed burning gasoline over a wide
area onto the helpless adults and young children.
Mothers were burning their hands while frantically trying to beat
out flames on their children’s gasoline-soaked bathing suits.
Children were screaming in pain while lifeguard chief Bud Higgins and
several of his men administered first aid.
Ambulances from all over came to transport the burned victims to
hospitals. The Army brought in their ambulances and help came from
the California Highway Patrol and the U.S. Coast Guard.
More than 40 adults and children were treated for some kind of
burn that day. As for the Barregas’ and Silvas’ beautiful Sunday
picnic, just minutes before the crash, the parents had gone to their
parked cars, leaving their children playing on the sand. This day
would be the last time that they would gaze on four of their
children’s smiling faces.
Three other children in their family received major burns and were
treated at the Orange County Hospital. In all, the four children were
the only deaths in the worst air disaster to happen in Huntington
Beach history.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.