The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 08.09.2004, Side 4

The White Falcon - 08.09.2004, Side 4
Steven Memovich stands in front of two damaged propellers recovered from the crash site. Memovich returned almost 60 years to the day of the crash. On Sept. 16, 1944, with World War II still rag- ing across Europe and the Pacific, ten men climbed into their B-17 bomber and left Keflavik, Iceland for their assigned air base in England. The crew, part of the U.S. Army Air Forces, was fresh out of training school and on its way to help support the war effort. They made a routine stop in Keflavik to refuel the plane. Less than an hour after takeoff, the plane crashed onto a glacier. All ten men survived. Now, almost 60 years later, one of the survivors of that day’s event recently returned to Iceland to visit the crash site. Steven Memovich, now almost 80 years old and living in Vancouver, Washington, was the plane’s navigator on that ill-fated trip. It was his first long- distance flight. For 47 years the plane and the crash site remained buried on Iceland’s Eyjaljallajokull Glacier. In 1991, however, the site was discovered by a shepherd named Arni AlfreSsson. The glacier had begun to recede, revealing what had been lost all those years ago. AlfreSsson obtained Memovich’s name from the U.S. Army Air Forces records and contacted him. “Ami has been in contact with us for five or six years and he kept wanting us to come over and visit so he could meet us,” said Memovich. “We’ve had several calls over the years, people wanting to get in contact with us. I think Ami was the most persistent and he was the one that had done most of the work of locating the crash site.” Memovich said his wife and kids wanted to see where it happened. “We just decided, I guess, that if we were ever going to make the trip, we had to make it now,” said Memovich. In May, while he was deciding on making the trip, Memovich received a letter in the mail from Iceland. The writer was Sigurdur Gudmundsson. While AlfreSsson had found the crash site, Gudmundsson had discovered something more personal to Memovich out there on the glacier- a bracelet that had been given to Memovich by his wife, a bracelet lost in the crash almost 60 years before. In his letter Gudmundsson said his curiosity and interest in mountain climbing motivated him to climb to the crash site. “We found interesting pieces from the plane and so did Mr. Alfredsson,” Gudmundsson wrote. “The bracelet was the one thing I could identify.” With his bracelet found and returned and Alfredsson’s persistence, Memovich, his wife, and their three daughters and one son arrived in Keflavik on August 24 and traveled to the crash site on August 27. “Ami got in touch with us and said we needed to be over here for at least a week because if the weather was bad we couldn’t go up,” said Memovich. Alfredsson is part of a search and rescue team and he arranged for Memovich and his family to go up to the glacier. “The search and rescue unit took us up to the crash site,” said Memovich. “Ami’s group that he works with in the search and rescue are wonderful people.” The unit took Memovich and his children up to the crash site using snowcats and jeeps. Memovich’s wife, Marilyn, did not go. They spent the day up at the crash site, looking at the artifacts left behind and revealed by the receding glacier. They also saw the house where the crew made the telephone call for help after com- ing down from the glacier. The place where they spent the night is now a youth hostel. “It was a very interesting trip,” said Memovich. “The more I looked at it, the more I realized what a miracle it was for a bomber loaded with avia- tion gas to crash, 10 people in it, nobody really even seriously hurt. Ami says where we came down off the glacier was the only possible way we could get down.” Memovich said he had an angel looking over his shoulder that day. Nothing could have prepared the crew for the events that took place. In their training prior to the journey to England, Memovich said if the weather was bad, they didn’t fly. The weather in Iceland that day was bad and there was no visibil- ity. Memovich said he doesn’t remember why they decided to leave, but they did. Less than an hour into their trip, they crashed. “There was no warning,” said Memovich. “We were flying and we had a severe downdraft that dropped us about 1,000-1,500 feet. Apparently, the copilot right after the downdraft looked out his win- dow and just caught a glimpse. He said, ‘There’s a mountain there.’ We weren’t even thinking about it. We thought we were higher, we thought we were over the coastline.” Memovich said the plane hit the top of the glacier and skidded, breaking off one of the wings in the process. “The body stayed fairly good,” said Memovich. “The wing and engine caught fire and we thought it might explode with all that aviation gas. We all got out of the wreck. We sheltered ourselves with a parachute behind'a rock close by and waited to see what was going to happen. When the fire went out we went back and got in the belly of the plane and made it as weatherproof as we could by stuffing clothes in the cracks. We got out the Gibson Girl, the emergency radio, and assigned shifts and cranked that thing 24 hours a day for two days.” Memovich said the thing that prompted them to get out of there was on the first night he saw a couple of lights flickering in the valley below where they were on the glacier. He shot off a couple of flares in hopes of getting someone’s attention. Memovich said a few people living in the area saw the flares but assumed it was some kind of military operation that was none of their business. When it became appar- ent that nobody was coming for them, the crew tied themselves together with parachute cord and, with Memovich in the lead, made their way down the gla- cier to the house where they made a call for help. They spent the next two weeks in the hospital recovering from exposure. Memovich said he sent Marilyn a telegram and said everything was well and for her not to worry. He wrote nothing about the crash. He assumed she already knew, but she didn’t. “I wasn’t notified at all by the government,” said Marilyn. “My first word was from the bombadeer’s wife. She sent me the front page of a letter talking about something that had happened and I hadn’t heard a thing about it.” Sixty years later AlfreSsson and his crew are work- ing on bringing the plane down from the glacier even though the plane is in pieces. “Nothing is intact,” said Gregg Memovich, Steven’s son. “It has slid down the glacier. It got buried in the glacier and then moved down with it over the 60 years and then came out of the bottom of the snowcap area.” Which is how AlfreSsson came to find it. On this trip AlfreSsson gave Memovich a few souvenirs from the crash site to take with him, includ- ing a toothbrush, a can of processed American cheese with bacon, and a can of beef and pork. Memovich, one of only four crew- members still alive, said he was glad he came back to Iceland and that he and his family enjoyed the trip. Although the return of Memovich’s bracelet prompted local interest both in his hometown and in Iceland about his story, Memovich said the bracelet didn’t make the difference in his decision to come back. “The kids wanted to come,” said Memovich. “And my wife was very interested.” Memovich has no plans to return to Iceland, but his kids hope to someday return with their own families. And although Marilyn did not make it up to the crash site she said the trip was wonderful. “I will remember the people,” said Marilyn. “The people have been absolutely wonderful.” Page 4 The White Falcon September 8, 2004

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