The following was taken from an Idaho Statesman article
published 01/29/93.
"Bomber Crash 50 Years Ago Began Ordeal For 8
Crewmen"
by Mark Carnopis
Fifty years ago today, eight crewmen of a bomber that crashed in
northern Idaho began an odyssey
of survival that continued for more than two weeks.
Everyone aboard the B-23 Dragon bomber, which veered off course
in a snowstorm, survived the
January 29, 1943, crash in the Payette National Forest about 15
miles northeast of McCall.
Five days later, three of the crewmen decided to hike out for
help. On February 13, a Cascade
bush pilot named Penn Stohr spotted the wreckage and the five men
there. They were rescued the
next day.
On Feb. 16, the three men who had left the crash site found a
Civil Conservation Corps camp.
One of them stayed there, while the other two hiked to a ranger
station, where they phoned for
help.They had traveled 42 miles in heavy snow before being
rescued.
At the height of the search, the entire Second Air Force, which
included the Army Air Corps from
the entire Northwest, joined private pilots in scouring three
states.
Efforts to contact one of the crewmen, Edward Freeborg, 69, of
Portland, Oregon, were
unsuccessful Thursday.
But Boise aviation historian Lowell Thompson provided a copy of a
nine-page report of the crash
purportedly written by Freeborg. Using that report, news stories
of the crash and a 1991
newspaper interview with Freeborg, a Statesman reporter was able
to compile the following
account of the incident, which made headlines across the nation:
The Army Air Corps bomber, which was used for coastal patrol and
in training missions, was en
route from Tonopah, Nev., to McChord Field in Tacoma, Washington,
the morning of Jan. 29
when it got lost in a blinding snowstorm and ended up over Idaho.
Efforts to find a suitable landing site in the rugged terrain
were unsuccessful. With gas running low,
the crew decided to try an emergency landing on Loon Lake, near
Upper Payette Lake.
The bomber hit the far shore, sawing off 20-inch trees for about
100 yards. Both wings were
sheared off and the nose was smashed, but the fuselage remained
intact. The only injuries were a
broken leg and a severely cut hand.
The crew searched the plane and found two 12-gauge shotguns and
some emergency rations
chocolate vitamin bars. The first night, they took turns
gathering wood and sleeping on green pine
boughs.
Freeborg said attempts to hike out of the area or make themselves
more visible from the air were
difficult.
"The future was none too bright for us, with no food... half
starved, half frozen and a regular
blizzard going on about us. This continued for about 10 days...
covering every smoke signal we
could make, and making it terribly cold and in general hampering
all of our efforts in letting the
outside world knowing of our whereabouts," he wrote.
He said those who tried to go looking for help "met with
failure, due to exceptionally deep snow,
with men in each case sinking into snow up to their waists and
sometimes so deep they had to help
each other out of the holes they had made."
On Feb. 1, Freeborg was able to fix the radio and send a message,
which included a wrong
location: "Crew intact, need food, clothing and an axe. At
the south end of a lake near Boise,
Idaho."
The night of Feb. 2, Freeborg and two other crewmen decided they
would hike out for help. They
left the next morning with small pieces of the chocolate, a
shotgun and canteens.
"We hiked across the lake and up to the top of the mountain
to look and see what type of territory
we were going to have to climb out of," Freeborg wrote.
"Believe me, that was the most
disappointing sight I had ever hoped to see. Hills, hills and
more hills in every direction. Believe me,
I firmly believed that we looked in the face of death."
The first several days, all they ate were chocolate and one
squirrel, which Freeborg shot. The fifth
day, they found a small cabin with three cots and some food. They
also saw a sign that said McCall
was 25 miles away. They decided that two of them would keep
hiking on the road.
On Feb. 13, Penn Stohr spotted the plane wreckage and crewmen
while delivering mail by air. He
could not land on the frozen lake, but came back the next day
with a ski plane and rescued the five
crewmen still with the bomber.
Stohr died in 1957 at the age of 54, his son, Dan Stohr, said in
an interview Thursday from Boise.
He died in a plane crash while doing aerial spraying in Montana.
Dan Stohr said his father never said much about the crash and
rescue. "He was a very modest guy.
Usually what I heard is what I read. He would just have assumed
to stay out of the limelight."
Back in the wilderness, Freeborg and the others had found a camp
mess hall and an Idaho National
Forest booklet that included a map. Freeborg and another crewman
decided to look for a ranger
station that the map indicated was nearby. They followed
telephone lines to the station, where they
telephoned for help.
Fifty years later, remnants of the airplane remain, and it still
is a popular site for hikers.
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