Military Collector and Historian Spring 2018 Vol 70 No. 1

Page 96

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Military Collector & Historian

My First Flight in an F–4 Phantom Lt. Col. John Norvell, USAF (Ret.) 22. “The Quiet Old Depository,” Charleston Mercury, 18 September 1861, 2: 1. 23. See “Eighth Weekly Report of the Soldiers’ Relief Association of Charleston,” Charleston Mercury, 18 September 1861, 2: 2, and “Soldiers’ Relief Association,” Charleston Daily Courier, 9 October 1861, 4: 1. 24. “Quartermaster’s Department,” Charleston Mercury, 16 September 1861, 2: 2. 25. Letter from S.L. Glover to Gov. Francis Pickens, 8 October 1861, www.mqamericana.com, accessed June 2017. 26. “To Rev. J. Bachman,” Charleston Daily Courier, 29 April 1862, 4: 4, citing the Daily South Carolinian. 27. Cauthen, Journals of the South Carolina Executive Councils, 231. 28. “To the Soldiers’ Aid Societies of South Carolina,” Charleston Daily Courier, 30 September 1861, 1: 2. 29. See “Obituary,” Charleston Mercury, 5 June 1862, 2: 3; and “General Order No. 22,” Charleston Daily Courier, 7 June 1862, 3: 1. Jones had been chairman of the South Carolina Ordnance Board in early 1861. He next commanded the 14th South Carolina until his resignation on 26 March 1862. On 14 April 1862, he was appointed auditor of accounts and vouchers of disbursing officers in state service. See Cauthen, Journals of the South Carolina Executive Councils, 130, 148. 30. Cauthen, Journals of the South Carolina Executive Councils, 192. The “Quarter Master stores of all bulky or heavy articles” had been ordered to be removed to Columbia “for safe keeping” on 22 February 1862. See also, 98. 31. Ibid., 231. 32. On 17 July 1861, the Charleston Daily Courier (2: 2) reported Hatch’s accounts had been “audited and examined before Colonel Wilmot G. DeSaussure, Executive Secretary for finances,” and were found to have been kept “skilfully, faithfully, and accurately.” Two days later, the Mercury reported the amounts paid out by the State Quartermaster Department amounted to $574,040, with “satisfactory vouchers, balancing exactly.” See Charleston Mercury, 19 July 1861, 1: 2. Extant records in the State Archives for the period when Hatch was QMG consist mainly of lists of monetary requisitions for February, March, April, and May 1861. 33. Report of the Chief of the Department of the Military of South Carolina to His Excellency, Governor Pickens (Columbia, SC: Charles P. Pelham, State Printer, 1862), 46, Appendix F. 34. Cauthen, Journals of the South Carolina Executive Councils, 242. 35. Vouchers, QM Dept. Records, S.C. State Archives. 36. “Quarterly Return of Clothing received and issued at Columbia, S.C.,” 30 September 1862 and 31 December 1862, RCG, State Archives. 37. “An Act to Repeal the Law Authorizing Commutation for Soldiers’ Clothing to be Furnished by the Secretary of War in Kind,” 8 October 1862, Statutes, II, 69. 38. Cauthen, Journals of the South Carolina Executive Councils, 279. 39. “Clothing,” Charleston Daily Courier, 28 October 1862, 1: 1. 40. Quarterly Return of Clothing received and issued at Columbia, S.C.,” 31 December 1862, RCG, State Archives. 41. William A. Gibson, Confederate Papers Relating to Citizens or Business Firms, compiled 1874–1899, documenting the period 1861–1865, National Archives publication M346, Record Group 109, National Archives, Washington, DC.

I

n fall 1972, I arrived at Luke AFB to upgrade to the backseat of the F–4. I had come to this point late in life, 28 and a captain, having been a ground pounder (non-rated or non-flying officer) for first 4 years of my career, then going to Navigator training. I had always wanted to fly jets when I was a kid so when I was selected to fly the F–4, after nav school, it was a dream come true. The F–4 Phantom II was the primary Air Force fighter of the Vietnam War. It had entered the inventory in 1960, so in 1972 it was relatively new. It was not a small fighter, it had two big GE J–79 engines that could blast it off the deck and the bird could weigh in at nearly 60,000 pounds when fully loaded with fuel at take-off. When the afterburners were cooking, the thrust was its biggest advantage, it could push you out there away from an enemy or help you engage him in combat. Training began at Luke with ground school. There I learned the aircraft systems, practiced emergency procedures, and spent about a month in training before I even got to fly “Big Ugly,” as we affectionately called the bird. As a WSO (Weapons Systems Officer) you don’t fly in an F–4 — you wear it. The cockpit was very small and so tight I could hardly move. I had on a G suit to handle increased G forces, an oxygen mask, and was tightly strapped to a rocket ejection seat. Which brings me finally back my first flight. For weeks we had practiced in the simulator to make all of the checklist procedures second nature. On 22 September 1972 the weeks of preparation and classes came together in that first flight. I remember it as if it was yesterday. We went through the preflight, started the engines, I completed aligning the INS and turned on the radar, and the Aircraft Commander (AC), who was an instructor pilot, made his call: “F–4D–010, requesting permission to taxi.” Our F–4 taxied out of its parking space and slowly moved into position. While Hollywood has accustomed Americans to think that there is a lot of banter between aircrew members, in actuality there is usually strict radio discipline. In the back seat I finished my checklists as the AC got permission to take off. I wasn’t excited or even nervous—actually I really didn’t know what to expect— just did what I was trained to do. Now on the runway, the AC pushed the throttles which had been idling in what was called “Military Power,” past the detent into afterburner, and released the brakes. The Phantom jumped off the runway. There is no other way to describe it. It was like being shot out of a cannon strapped to the shell. In the back, I called off 100 knots as we passed that speed and began to rapidly lift off. All by the book.


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Articles inside

My First Flight in an F–4 Phantom, by Lt. Col. John Norvell, USAF (Ret

8min
pages 96-99

Clothing the Confederate Soldiers of South Carolina, 1861–1865, by Ron Field

22min
pages 90-95

Capt. John S. Wilson of Danville, Pennsylvania, 1840 to 1847, by Randy W. Hackenburg

19min
pages 81-86

Capt. George T. Balch, U.S. Army Ordnance Department, and his 1861–1862 Letter Book, by Charles Pate

1hr
pages 65-80

Women’s Motor Corps of America Coat, 1917–1920, by Marc W. Sammis

9min
pages 87-89

Francis Back, by René Chartrand

4min
page 64

A Dragoon on Trial: The Quality of Military Justice and the Court-martial of Pvt. Percival Lowe, by Will Gorenfeld

24min
pages 59-63

The Message Center: From the President

3min
page 58

966: “MarPat” (Marine Pattern) USMC Camouflaged Utility Uniform, 2002, by John M. Carrillo and Kenneth Smith-Christmas

5min
pages 54-55

Testing Underwater Ordnance in the Patuxent During World War II, by Merle T. Cole

57min
pages 37-51

MILITARY UNIFORMS IN AMERICA 965: Compagnies franches de la Marine, “Canadian Style” dress, mid-eighteenth century, by Francis Back and René Chartrand

4min
pages 52-53

by Peter Rindlisbacher and René Chartrand

4min
pages 56-57

Imitation is the Sincerest Form of Flattery: How the U.S. Took a German Ordnance Item for its Own, by Thomas A. Crawford

16min
pages 7-13

The Shoulder Sleeve Insignia of the Fourth Brigade of Marines, 1918–19

25min
pages 21-28

The Sailmakers Detachment: Italian American Tailors in the Air Service in World War I, by Maj. Peter L. Belmonte, USAF (Ret

15min
pages 29-34

A 1912 Real Picture Postcard of a Sailor from USS Franklin by Anthony F. Gero

2min
page 36

by Kenneth L. Smith-Christmas and Owen Linlithgow Conner

26min
pages 14-20

On Our Covers

4min
page 35

World War I Real Photograph Postcard of U.S. Army Officers, by Alan Bogan

0
page 4

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia of the District of Paris, A.E.F., by Dan Joyce

7min
pages 5-6
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