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<channel><title><![CDATA[AeroQuest - Home]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.aeroquest.org/home]]></link><description><![CDATA[Home]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2025 11:40:12 -0700</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[While tracking one warplane mystery, sleuths solve another ]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.aeroquest.org/home/while-tracking-one-warplane-mystery-sleuths-solve-another1]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.aeroquest.org/home/while-tracking-one-warplane-mystery-sleuths-solve-another1#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Fri, 18 Apr 2014 20:27:11 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.aeroquest.org/home/while-tracking-one-warplane-mystery-sleuths-solve-another1</guid><description><![CDATA[ By&nbsp;Ken Kaye, Staff writer 11:05 a.m. EDT, April 18, 2014The mystery of Flight 19 remains unsolved. Yet, as a result of the quest to unravel that riddle, another bewildering aviation case has just been cracked.New evidence led two aviation sleuths to believe that a TBM Avenger found in the&nbsp;Everglades&nbsp;25 years ago might have been flown by the commander of the "Lost Patrol," the five Navy torpedo bombers that vanished after takeoff from&nbsp;Fort Lauderdale&nbsp;in 1945.But a photo  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;max-width:100%;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.aeroquest.org/uploads/8/1/4/4/8144830/1397852816.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder wsite-image" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;" class="wsite-caption"></span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">By&nbsp;<a href="http://bio.tribune.com/KenKaye" style="">Ken Kaye</a>, Staff writer 11:05 a.m. EDT, April 18, 2014<br /><br />The mystery of Flight 19 remains unsolved. Yet, as a result of the quest to unravel that riddle, another bewildering aviation case has just been cracked.<br /><br />New evidence led two aviation sleuths to believe that a TBM Avenger found in the&nbsp;<a title="Everglades" href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/topic/environmental-issues/natural-resources/everglades-PLTRA0000115.topic" style="">Everglades</a>&nbsp;25 years ago might have been flown by the commander of the "Lost Patrol," the five Navy torpedo bombers that vanished after takeoff from&nbsp;<a title="Fort Lauderdale" href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/topic/us/florida/broward-county/fort-lauderdale-PLGEO100100403070000.topic" style="">Fort Lauderdale</a>&nbsp;in 1945.<br /><br />But a photo of the Avenger's bureau number instead proves the plane was flown by Ens. Ralph N. Wachob, 26, of Fort Lauderdale, a Naval Reserve officer who developed vertigo during a navigational exercise. He crashed in far western&nbsp;<a href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/" style="">Broward County</a>&nbsp;and was killed on March 16, 1947 &ndash; 15 months after Flight 19 disappeared and popularized the myth of the Bermuda Triangle.<br /><br />"We have&nbsp;positively&nbsp;identified the unknown Everglades Avenger, thus solving a decades-old mystery,"&nbsp;said Andy Marocco, a California businessman and a Flight 19 aficionado, who pieced together the puzzle. "It just wasn't the Avenger we were hoping for."<br /><br />Aviation experts estimate that between 50 and 100 military and civilian aircraft have crashed in the Everglades over the past several decades and have yet to be found &ndash; or positively identified. An air boat group that occasionally finds wrecks says some of the planes are noted on maps as hazards to navigation.<br /><br />Marocco and fellow Lost Patrol enthusiast, Jon Myhre, a former Palm Beach International Airport controller, initially were convinced Wachob's plane was the TBM-3 Avenger flown by Lt. Charles Taylor, the Flight 19 leader.&nbsp;<br /><br />They based their theory on the Navy's official Flight 19 accident report that said the planes might have turned southeast after being spotted over North Florida. After the&nbsp;<em style="">Sun Sentinel</em>&nbsp;ran a story about their theory, Minerva Bloom of the Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale Museum sent Marocco several photos of the 1989 wreckage of the TBM-3 Avenger.<br /><br />Marocco found the bureau number of the Everglades plane, 53118, from one of the photos and ran it through Navy aircraft history and accident databases. It verified that Wachob, not Taylor, was the single occupant of the plane.<br /><br />"That is amazing, that we now have a name and can put that particular wreck to rest," Bloom said.<br /><br />Experts saw the same number in 1989, but it was mislabeled, Marocco said.<br /><br />Wachob, the pilot of the doomed plane, encountered heavy rain while on a training flight from Miami to<a title="Tampa" href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/topic/us/florida/hillsborough-county/tampa-PLGEO100100404010000.topic" style="">Tampa</a>&nbsp;with two other planes. He lost sight of the flight leader, got disoriented and crashed. The other two planes returned to Miami, Marocco said.<br /><br />Navy officials recovered Wachob's body and investigated the accident. In May, 1989 &ndash; 42 years later &ndash; the wreckage of his plane was spotted by a Broward Sheriff's helicopter pilot.<br /><br />"Based upon accident records, it&nbsp;seems that&nbsp;the identity of the Avenger was known to the Navy at one time," Marocco said. "It was just forgotten about for many decades."<br /><br />Hoping for clues in the Lost Patrol case, Marocco and Myhre asked the Broward Airboat, Halftrack and Conservation Club of&nbsp;<a title="Davie" href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/topic/us/florida/broward-county/davie-PLGEO100100403050000.topic" style="">Davie</a>&nbsp;to hunt for the wreckage of the Avenger. While searching, the group last week stumbled on another vintage warplane.<br /><br />"We just happened to see the landing gear sticking up out of the sawgrass," said Brett Holcombe, the club's president. "We also found the tail section and two wings. But the motor, we couldn't find."<br /><br />Rick "Boog" Mears, a club member, initially discovered the plane in far western Broward near the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/palmbeach/" style="">Palm Beach County</a>&nbsp;line. Based on photos by the air boaters, Marocco identified the plane as a Douglas A-1 Skyraider, a single-engine attack plane.<br /><br />He still is trying to identify its specific mission and pilot.<br /><br />The air boaters didn't remove any of the wreckage because the Navy plans to look into the matter.<br /><br />"It's considered a sunken or terrestrial military aircraft, so we're definitely going to be interested in knowing about it," said Paul Taylor, spokesman for the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington, D.C.&nbsp;<br /><br />Marocco, head of Aeroquest.org, a volunteer aviation organization, said the group now plans to "investigate other historical WWII aircraft wrecks that may be in the Everglades or elsewhere in Florida."<br /><br />Meanwhile, he's not abandoning his theory that some of the Flight 19 planes might have crashed in the Everglades.<br /><br />"There's still plenty of land in the Everglades, where a small plane like an Avenger could have crashed and still waiting&nbsp;for us to discover," he said.<br /><br /><em style=""><a href="mailto:kkaye@tribune.com" style="">kkaye@tribune.com</a>&nbsp;or 561-243-6530.</em><br /><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.aeroquest.org/uploads/8/1/4/4/8144830/6079453_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:100%;max-width:1100px" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Has the Mystery of Flight 19 been solved?]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.aeroquest.org/home/has-the-mystery-of-flight-19-been-solved]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.aeroquest.org/home/has-the-mystery-of-flight-19-been-solved#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Sat, 05 Apr 2014 21:43:37 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.aeroquest.org/home/has-the-mystery-of-flight-19-been-solved</guid><description><![CDATA[       By Ken Kaye, Sun Sentinel2:32 PM EDT, April 5, 2014When five Navy torpedo bombers took off from Fort Lauderdale in  December 1945 and failed to return, they created one of the greatest  aviation mysteries of all time and popularized the myth of the Bermuda  Triangle. Now two aviation sleuths, who have spent more than 25 years trying to  crack the case, have a compelling new theory: They believe that a  torpedo bomber discovered in western Broward County in 1989 belonged to the lead pilot  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.aeroquest.org/uploads/8/1/4/4/8144830/942628_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:100%;max-width:1003px" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>  <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><br />By <a title="" style="" href="http://bio.tribune.com/KenKaye">Ken Kaye</a>, Sun Sentinel<br /><span style=""></span>2:32 PM EDT, April 5, 2014<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span><span></span><strong><font color="#2a2a2a">When five Navy torpedo bombers took off from Fort Lauderdale in  December 1945 and failed to return, they created one of the greatest  aviation mysteries of all time and popularized the myth of the Bermuda  Triangle.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Now two aviation sleuths, who have spent more than 25 years trying to  crack the case, have a compelling new theory: They believe that a  torpedo bomber discovered in western <a title="" style="" href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/">Broward County</a> in 1989 belonged to the lead pilot of Flight 19 and that some of the other planes also crashed on land.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> "The circumstantial evidence we've amassed is pretty conclusive,"  said Jon Myhre, a former Palm Beach International Airport controller.  "Nobody had connected the dots before."<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Without knowing each other, the two men independently studied the  "Lost Patrol" from various angles to calculate where the planes might  have gone down while on a routine training mission.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Myhre, of Sebastian, wrote a book, Discovery of Flight 19, about his  investigation. After reading it, Andy Marocco, the other enthusiast,  called Myhre, and they began collaborating.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> "It all started falling right in line," Marocco said.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Marocco, a California businessman, was the one who discovered new  information that might break open the 68-year-old mystery. He went to  the National Archives and obtained the Navy's 500-page "Board of  Investigation Report on the loss of Flight 19."<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> In it, he found that the USS Solomons aircraft carrier, while off the  coast of Daytona Beach, picked up a radar signal from four to six  unidentified planes over North Florida, about 20 miles northwest of  Flagler Beach.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> That was at 7 p.m. on Dec. 5 1945, or about an hour and half after  Flight 19 was due back at Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale &mdash; today,  Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> While at an altitude of about 4,000 feet and flying about 135 mph,  the planes then made a turn to a compass heading of 170 degrees, or  southeast, important details never before been factored into the Flight  19 disappearance, the two men said.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Based on the southeast course, Myhre and Marocco recalculated that at  least one of the single-engine, eight-ton planes would have crashed  within miles of where the torpedo bomber was found 25 years ago.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> That wreckage was spotted by a Broward Sheriff's helicopter pilot in  the Everglades about 10 miles west of the Alligator Alley toll booth and  about one mile north of the highway.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> At the time, several experts, including Myhre, concluded the plane  could not have come from Flight 19 because it was too far from where the  Navy had received its last vague fix on the squadron, about 150 miles  east of Daytona Beach, over the Atlantic.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Myhre and Marocco now say it's fully possible the USS Solomons was  tracking the Lost Patrol. Because it was night and there was bad  weather, the pilots probably had no idea they had meandered over land,  Marocco said.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> To bolster their case, they checked photos of the cockpit of the 1989  plane and determined it was a TBM Avenger-3, the exact model flown by  Lt. Charles Taylor, the commander of Flight 19.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> From an Internet search, they say a rubber heel found at the wreckage  site came from a size 11 or 12 dress shoe that would fit a man at least  6 feet tall. "Charles Taylor was 6-foot-1," Marocco said.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Meanwhile, the Navy has no record of a TBM-3 Avenger missing in or  around Florida between 1944 and 1952 &mdash; other than Charles Taylor's plane  from Flight 19 &mdash; further leaving open the possibility the Everglades  wreck belonged to Flight 19.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Until now, most military and history buffs believed the 14 crew  members of Flight 19 perished when their planes ran out of fuel and  crashed in the Atlantic.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Because the planes disappeared without a trace, Flight 19 bolstered  the myth of the Bermuda Triangle, the area between Miami, Puerto Rico  and Bermuda, where hundreds of planes and ships have purportedly  vanished.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> To confirm their theory on the Lost Patrol, the two men need to  re-inspect the plane in the Everglades and find Navy bureau numbers on  its wings that would match up with those on Taylor's torpedo bomber.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> The problem is they can't find the wreckage.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> They fear hunters, air boaters or others who roam Everglades may have  taken pieces of the wreckage as souvenirs, particularly after its  discovery was publicized in 1989. Still, they hope someone with an  interest in digging up history will help them financially to mount an  expedition.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> "To this day we still can't find an exact location," Marocco said.  "But if we find that plane again, I think we'll be able to positively  identify it."<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> What happened to the other planes? Marocco thinks they scattered in  different directions &mdash; while over Florida &mdash; in hopes they would pick up a  homing signal to either an aircraft carrier or an airport. He noted two  of the planes were flown by Navy crews, three by Marine crews.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> "I think they scattered, based on their allegiance to their military  unit," Marocco said. "The three Marine planes went toward the Gulf of  Mexico and the two Navy planes went south. I think they all ran out of  fuel and crashed."<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Myhre and Marocco say to this point, the Navy has been of little help  in determining whether the Everglades plane was part of Flight 19.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> Paul Taylor, spokesman for the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington, D.C., said the Navy needs more information.<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span> "We're open to hearing more about the theory and welcome the  gentlemen to forward their findings to us for closer examination," he  said.<br /><span style=""></span></font></strong><br /><span style=""></span></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>