Remembering the Dragon Lady: Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane
With heightened tensions mounting in the Cold War, President Dwight Eisenhower's request for more accurate intelligence information on the Soviet Union was the spark that ignited the U-2 project. Modified USAF bombers began overflights of the Soviet Union in 1951, but existing lower flying aircraft in the US inventory were vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire and a number of cross-border flights were shot down. To meet the challenge and improve the survivability, the Lockheed Corporation received approval for their revolutionary design of a new recon aircraft on December 9, 1954. The company began work under a heavy veil of secrecy with only 81 people, including 25 engineers. A test pilot flew the first flight on August 1, 1955, after only eight months of production, a record-breaking result for rollout of a new project, especially one this complex and innovative. A dedicated and inventive group of contractors came together to support the project with partial pressure suits for pilots, high-resolution cameras, and an engine that could carry the aircraft to altitudes of 70,000 feet and higher. Nicknamed the Dragon Lady, the U-2 has flown over Cuba, Alaska, North and South poles, Vietnam, Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, and Afghanistan. The U-2 is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. More recently it flew over the hurricane ravaged US Gulf Coast to collect imagery of the destruction over a 90,000 square mile area. First-person memoirs of many of the men who supported the early US spy plane project are included in this book. They include pilots, maintenance specialists, a flight surgeon, photographic specialists and some family members. The US also trained U-2 pilots from Taiwan and the UK and some of their photos and memoirs are in this collection. An example of the entries in the book include one pilot's experience on a flight over the North Pole when he discovered his instrumentation was inaccurate due to the magnetic fields and realized almost too late that he was flying directly toward the Soviet Union. Maintenance technicians recalled working long hours to prepare aircraft for historic flights over Cuba. Photographic specialists remembered the difficult conditions in Vietnam, and the care required to download the exposed film of North Vietnamese targets from the cameras in the aircraft. All of these experiences were achieved under Top Secret security conditions and on a "need to know" basis.
1113897510
Remembering the Dragon Lady: Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane
With heightened tensions mounting in the Cold War, President Dwight Eisenhower's request for more accurate intelligence information on the Soviet Union was the spark that ignited the U-2 project. Modified USAF bombers began overflights of the Soviet Union in 1951, but existing lower flying aircraft in the US inventory were vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire and a number of cross-border flights were shot down. To meet the challenge and improve the survivability, the Lockheed Corporation received approval for their revolutionary design of a new recon aircraft on December 9, 1954. The company began work under a heavy veil of secrecy with only 81 people, including 25 engineers. A test pilot flew the first flight on August 1, 1955, after only eight months of production, a record-breaking result for rollout of a new project, especially one this complex and innovative. A dedicated and inventive group of contractors came together to support the project with partial pressure suits for pilots, high-resolution cameras, and an engine that could carry the aircraft to altitudes of 70,000 feet and higher. Nicknamed the Dragon Lady, the U-2 has flown over Cuba, Alaska, North and South poles, Vietnam, Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, and Afghanistan. The U-2 is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. More recently it flew over the hurricane ravaged US Gulf Coast to collect imagery of the destruction over a 90,000 square mile area. First-person memoirs of many of the men who supported the early US spy plane project are included in this book. They include pilots, maintenance specialists, a flight surgeon, photographic specialists and some family members. The US also trained U-2 pilots from Taiwan and the UK and some of their photos and memoirs are in this collection. An example of the entries in the book include one pilot's experience on a flight over the North Pole when he discovered his instrumentation was inaccurate due to the magnetic fields and realized almost too late that he was flying directly toward the Soviet Union. Maintenance technicians recalled working long hours to prepare aircraft for historic flights over Cuba. Photographic specialists remembered the difficult conditions in Vietnam, and the care required to download the exposed film of North Vietnamese targets from the cameras in the aircraft. All of these experiences were achieved under Top Secret security conditions and on a "need to know" basis.
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Remembering the Dragon Lady: Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane

Remembering the Dragon Lady: Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane

Remembering the Dragon Lady: Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane

Remembering the Dragon Lady: Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane

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Overview

With heightened tensions mounting in the Cold War, President Dwight Eisenhower's request for more accurate intelligence information on the Soviet Union was the spark that ignited the U-2 project. Modified USAF bombers began overflights of the Soviet Union in 1951, but existing lower flying aircraft in the US inventory were vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire and a number of cross-border flights were shot down. To meet the challenge and improve the survivability, the Lockheed Corporation received approval for their revolutionary design of a new recon aircraft on December 9, 1954. The company began work under a heavy veil of secrecy with only 81 people, including 25 engineers. A test pilot flew the first flight on August 1, 1955, after only eight months of production, a record-breaking result for rollout of a new project, especially one this complex and innovative. A dedicated and inventive group of contractors came together to support the project with partial pressure suits for pilots, high-resolution cameras, and an engine that could carry the aircraft to altitudes of 70,000 feet and higher. Nicknamed the Dragon Lady, the U-2 has flown over Cuba, Alaska, North and South poles, Vietnam, Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, and Afghanistan. The U-2 is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. More recently it flew over the hurricane ravaged US Gulf Coast to collect imagery of the destruction over a 90,000 square mile area. First-person memoirs of many of the men who supported the early US spy plane project are included in this book. They include pilots, maintenance specialists, a flight surgeon, photographic specialists and some family members. The US also trained U-2 pilots from Taiwan and the UK and some of their photos and memoirs are in this collection. An example of the entries in the book include one pilot's experience on a flight over the North Pole when he discovered his instrumentation was inaccurate due to the magnetic fields and realized almost too late that he was flying directly toward the Soviet Union. Maintenance technicians recalled working long hours to prepare aircraft for historic flights over Cuba. Photographic specialists remembered the difficult conditions in Vietnam, and the care required to download the exposed film of North Vietnamese targets from the cameras in the aircraft. All of these experiences were achieved under Top Secret security conditions and on a "need to know" basis.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781908916938
Publisher: Helion and Company
Publication date: 03/20/2013
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 408
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Brig Gen (Ret.) Gerald E. McIlmoyle specializes in military history with a focus on aviation.

Linda Rios Bromley retired from federal civil service after 33 years' employment in such locations as Laughlin AFB, Texas; Charleston Naval Base, South Carolina; USAF Headquarters, Europe; Wiesbaden, Germany; NASA; and the Internal Revenue Service, Houston, Texas. She co-authored with Brigadier General Gerald E. McIlmoyle (Ret) Remembering the Dragon Lady, Memoirs of the Men Who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane. As a result of that book, she was invited to write a similar book for another USAF organization... Together with Jim Bard and Frank Hayes, Linda co-authored We Served With Honor, Memories of the Men Who Served the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Wing. She has served as a member of the Board of Directors, Laughlin Heritage Foundation Museum in Del Rio, Texas and is currently a member of Cypress Ink Blots Writers’ Group in Cypress, Texas.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations vii

List of Abbreviations xvi

Preface 19

Acknowledgements 20

From Idea to Reality 21

A Temporary Unit was Born 21

A New Dimension: Development of the U-2 Program 21

A Tribute to Our Leader 24

In Memory of Our Leader 24

The Chosen Few 25

The Chosen Few Dragon Lady Pilots 25

The Ranch 29

Anthony P. (Tony) Bevacqua 42

Harry N. Cordes 47

Richard Giordano 56

Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle 57

Charles B. Stratton 60

Carmine Vito 62

Flying with the Lady 65

Julian Anderson 65

Buddy L. Brown 70

Richard (Dick) Callahan 73

Orville Clancy 75

Ward Graham 76

Patrick J. Halloran 77

Roger Herman 80

Anthony Martinez 82

Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle 88

Jack D. Nole 92

Chris Pocock 93

Francis G. (Frank) Powers 98

Daniel W. (Danny) Schmarr 100

Robert M. Wood 101

It Took a Dedicated Team ... 104

What is NEPHO? 104

Glenn R. Chapman 105

Alexander R. (Alex the Old) Dulevitz 108

Gary (Shorty) Erdman 114

Gerard (Jerry) Fogel 118

B. C. Fowler 120

Joe Franklin 123

Robert H. Ingram 125

Jose F. (Lops) Lopez 141

James D. Manis 144

William L. Ming 146

Loomis L. (Robbie) Robertson 147

Joseph (Rooster) Robinson 148

Charlie Rogers 151

Gene Stoddard 152

John W. Washburn 158

Buck A. Young 158

Dressing Up and Stepping Out 161

The Development of the Partial Pressure Suit 161

4080th SRW Physiological Support Division 161

James W. May 166

Lewis C. Nelson 171

Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle 179

Joseph (Joe) Ruseckas 180

Thomas J. (Woody) Woodall 181

Dragon Lady Doctors 195

Robert W. Paret 195

Dragon Lady Caregivers 197

Maintenance 197

James E. Ballard 200

Hugh W. Bell 201

Donald E. (Donnie) Brown 203

Harold A. (Brownie) Brownback 204

Swinton Burroughs 205

James E. (Soup) Campbell 213

Joseph (Joe) Chapman 219

George Debinski 224

Russell (Ed) Eddington 225

Carlton L. (Lyn) Fite 229

Frank T. Hayes 231

Richard Kemp 242

Arthur L. (Art) Kveck 244

Harry R. Magill 250

Samuel R. McDowell, Jr. 250

Marion E. Neal 251

Roger ('Big O') Owens 253

Glenn Simmons 255

Richard W. Staats 256

William J. Turpin 257

Gordon E. (Joe) Warner 258

Albert (Dan) White, Jr. 262

To Launch a Recon Around the World 267

Cuban Missile Crisis 267

Buddy L. Brown 268

Richard Henry 271

Joe Glenn Hyde, Jr 273

Ward G. Graham 277

Charles W. Kern 278

Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle 288

Alaska, North Pole and Vietnam Flights 291

Robert C. Birkett 291

Buddy L. Brown 302

Bill E. Bye 305

Edward B. Dixon 305

Roger Herman 307

Michael (Mike) Horochivsky 313

Charles W. Kern 317

Cozier Kline 334

Ray B. Lodin 335

Charles (Chuck) Maultsby 336

Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle 345

Victor L. (Vic) Milam 350

James K. Rogers 353

Family And Community 362

Buddy L. Brown 364

John Harvey 365

James S. Long 370

Patricia McIlmoyle 372

Clifford B. (Cliff) Melton 373

William T. (Rody) Rodenbach II 374

Royal Air Force U-2 Pilots 381

Royal Air Force U-2 Pilots 381

Martin Bee 381

Richard (Dick) Cloke 385

Republic of China Air Force U-2 Pilots 388

Republic of China Air Force U-2 Pilots 388

Recommended Reading 399

Index 400

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