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Photograph of airmail pilot Dean Smith

Description:

Airmail pilot Dean Smith is best known for a telegram he forwarded to Air Mail Service officials after a forced landing on May 15, 1923. The telegram read: "Dead sticked. Flying low. Only place to land on cow. Killed cow. Wrecked airplane. Scared me." Smith had been forced to land halfway between Millersburg and Guernsey, Iowa because of a stripped crankshaft. The cow, belonging to Mr. H.A. Sheda, was appraised at $75, which was paid to the owner in full by the department.

In 1925, Dean Smith was among the pilots who flew the first regular overnight service between New York and Chicago. Flying at 8,000 feet on his way west to Cleveland, he noticed that his motor suddenly quit. Fortunately, the beacon at an emergency field was visible, and Smith glided his de Havilland airplane toward the rotating light. He dropped one of his flares to light the ground and was able to glide to a safe landing. A replacement aircraft was flown to the field for Smith, and he took off, eager to cover the last 180 miles to Cleveland without adding more fuel to the airplane, thinking he had enough to easily make the trip between the main and emergency tanks.

While in flight, Smith tested the emergency tank. Satisfied that it was fine, he continued his flight using up the fuel in his main tank. But when that ran out and he switched back to the emergency tank, nothing happened. With his engine dead, Smith was faced with his second nighttime gliding landing. Again he lit an emergency flare, seeing only a tiny break in the trees. Smith's second nighttime glided landing was not as successful as his first. This time the airplane turned end over end as the wings collapsed. Smith was still in the airplane when it slammed to the ground on its back, and he was able to get free of it without injury. Smith had landed near a farmhouse and enlisted the farmer's help in getting the mail to the nearest town and back on its way.

National Postal Museum, Curatorial Photographic Collection

Photographer: Unknown

Date:
c. 1924
Medium:
paper; photo-emulsion
Dimensions:
Height x Width (unframed): 10 x 8 in. (25.4 x 20.32 cm)
Museum ID:
A.2009-4
Place:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Credits:
National Postal Museum, Curatorial Photographic Collection
Photographer: Unknown

Glossary

Additional Records
  • Photograph of airmail pilot George Myers
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Harry A. Chandler
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Ira Biffle
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Jack Knight
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Jack Knight and unidentified individual
  • Photograph of airmail pilot James DeWitt Hill
  • Photograph of airmail pilot James Hill ready for transcontinental night flight
  • Photograph of airmail pilot John F. Milatzo
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Lloyd Bertaud
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Lloyd Bertaud and unidentified individual
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Lt. James Edgerton and sister
  • Photograph of airmail pilot Max Miller
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