Shemya & northwest airlines
(rick cochran)
My name is Rick Cochran, and I was aboard Shemya in 1950 and '51, employed by Northwest Airlines as a radio operator in
support of military airlift activities during the Korean conflict. This story presents my view of Shemya as seen by a Northwest
employee during that period. Bear in mind, I am now 78, and memories tend to fade. I will be looking for comments, corrections,
and facts to clean up what I am about to write. Please feel free to take exception, clarify, and generally bring these accounts into
the correct perspective.
I was on Shemya from July 21, 1950 to April 3, 1951, on temporary duty from my permanent position as ground radio operator in
Cleveland, Ohio. I had been in New York, looking for employment with the airline industry. I was about to nail down a flight radio
operator assignment with TransOcean Airlines with their Middle East subsidiary but they cancelled the operation and I returned
to my home in Cleveland and took the job with Northwest on September 11, 1949. Since I had a Radio Telephone and Telegraph
license and a Flight Radio Officers certificate, they ask me in July of 1950 to go to Shemya as a temporary assignment to support
their need for additional personnel during the military airlift. I accepted and soon found myself on a flight to Anchorage, and then
to Shemya. I don't know if you remember Anchorage in those days. As I recall there was only one hotel, the Westward. The
Anchorage Hilton now sets on that site. I had a cot on the second floor dormitory, and a clip board hung on the foot with my flight
time to Shemya. They woke you up when it was time to get a car to the airport.
Since Northwest had the experience, personnel, and facilities in place, to fly the Great Circle Route to the Orient and they were
the housekeeper on Shemya at the time, other airlines provided DC-4 and DC-6 aircraft, and NWA provided flight crews and flew
the airlift of munitions, troops, and other wartime supplies from Anchorage to Shemya and then to Tokyo or Seoul. It was not
uncommon to see United, Delta, Chicago & Southern, TWA, and other aircraft on the Shemya flight line. Arrival and departure was
handled through the Shemya Tower and GCA, operated by Army Air Force personnel. Once clear of the tower, aircraft
communications were by Morse Code (CW) to fixed stations in Anchorage, Shemya and Tokyo or Seoul. That was my job on
Shemya. The radio positions were in the flight operations building on the flight line. NWA was continuing their regular passenger
flights to the Orient during the airlift activities.
I worked twelve hours per day, seven days per week for the duration of the time I was there. All company business was
transmitted via CW from the company station in Anchorage, cargo lists, flight manifests, personnel assignments, etc. In the same
building was an Army radio teletype facility, which we supported and backed up when propagation was bad due to the northern
lights. Earthquakes were frequent and mostly ignored.
All flights were required to transmit a position report each hour during the flights west and east out of Shemya, but due to poor
radio propagation, there were many time when we did not hear from an aircraft for hours at a time. A "Pacific Alert" was called if
they missed two reports, but to my knowledge, we did not lose any flights while I was there.
All landings at Shemya were Ground Controlled Approach due to the continuing miserable weather. Constant fog and wind. When
the good weather did show up, everyone got outside to get some sun, if there was any, and all landings continued to be GCA for
practice. Adak was the alternate, but most of the time their weather was as bad or worse than ours, and the only choice was to
risk a landing at Shemya. The GCA and tower operators were excellent at their craft. Landing gear maintenance was high due to
hard landings because of zero visibility to touchdown.
I don't know when NWA was designated housekeeper on Shemya AFB. Probably sometime when they pioneered the route to
Tokyo. There were always about forty folks on Shemya and five families. You could get on a housing list when you arrived if you
wished. There were radio operators, maintenance, cooks, weather and administrative personnel. The Army had a compound also,
and I am not sure if NWA provided mess and housing support for them or not. One of the first things we did upon arrival was to go
to the old main hanger and pick out a flight jacket and boots. There were tons of "stuff" just lying around in the buildings. Photo
paper, electrical supplies, hobby shops full of tools and material. It looked as if someone blew a whistle and everyone just left. It
seemed weird. Jeeps and three-quarter ton vehicles just pushed over the side. NWA pulled a couple out of the junk and got them
operating for company vehicles.
There was a munitions junk pile on the beach over the high side of the island. Rounds of ammo, flares, bombs, mortar rounds, etc.
We didn't mess around there much.
Passengers continued to come through and during bad weather they became grounded for a couple of days. They were put up in
the "Hotel" for the duration. Some mighty large poker games have been known to occur from time to time.
Those of us who were ham radio operators had a surplus Army BC-610 modified to operate on ten meters into a full rhombic
antenna supported on sixty foot poles. Since most of the personnel were from Minneapolis, it was aimed in that direction, and the
island personnel could conduct phone patches to their families with almost telephone clarity, the path was so good. The amateur
call was KL7NU. It was used almost every day.
Sometime after I left, the Boeing Stratocruiser began to over-fly Shemya and NWA's importance declined, except as a alternate
landing field. The technology in communications had progress to the point the flight radio operators and their CW operations
were history and all communications were handled by the aircraft's second officer via voice over the entire route.
I returned to Cleveland in April of '51. Stayed with NWA a few more months and then headed to California. I worked for various
electronic firms for a couple of years and then accepted a position with GE in their communications operations and spend 32
years with them. Retired now and living in the foothills east of Sacramento. During my last four years with GE/Ericsson I was
working in Alaska and tried several times to get a ride to Shemya, but even though I had a top secret clearance and worked on
most all the military facilities in Alaska, I could not make it happen. Shemya had become too "secret".
I have been delighted to have been contacted by several ex-Shemyaites after I posted a comment on this website. I hope someone
can lend some additional information to support or clarify my thoughts.
Rick Cochran
Amateur: W6GGO
(Don't miss reading: The Shemya Informer, 1959)
Northwest Airlines - A Brief History
Shemya: 4000 Miles From Home
5. Radio equipment rack, operating positions.
6. Deserted Main Hanger just North of the West end of the
runway.
7. Hanger and Housing.
8. Looking West towards Hanger.
9. NWA Hotel and Mess buildings with partial view of amateur
antenna.
10. Army Compound.
11. Can still see remnants of WWII-era Pacific Huts still standing
on Shemya.
12. Northwest’s Compound.
13. Shemya Tower.
14. Transmitters and Antenna Farm.
15. Northwest Compound.
16. GIs waiting for a ride to Tokyo.
17. NWA Aircraft on the ramp.
18. Bernie oiling.
19. Northwest’s Ramp Service Operations.
20. Northwest’s Ops area.
21. The Ramp in front of Ops.
22. Ramp in front of Ops.
23. Seaboard & Western Aircraft on the line.
24. Alaska Air Aircraft on the line.
25. Commanding General's B17.
26. Departing Delta Airlines Aircraft.
27. An Air Sea Rescue Squadron B17 out of Adak. [Note: if you
look carefully underneath the fuselage, there hangs a boat that
can be dropped into the sea. This is a rare photo of one of these
aircraft. gls]
28. The Air Sea Rescue Squadron’s B-17 departs.
29. Apron and Ops.
30. Arriving Passenger Flight - note the stairway has the side
panels removed so the wind can blow through it. If left on, it
had to be chased all over the tarmac and you couldn't hold it
when passengers were trying to use it.
31. Ramp Activity.
32. Operations and Communications Building.
33. Arriving Flight and Follow-me jeep.
34. North Beach Ammo and bomb dump. Note how the layer
of tundra covered the "Rock."
35. View of the North Beach Munitions dump.
36. View of the North Beach Munitions dump.
37. Russian sailor's grave.
38. This is a photo sent by Rick Cochran that was taken on
Shemya in April of 1950. Can anyone identify this object? If
so, please let us know what it is, when it was built, etc.
Thanks!
39. Old Ammo and Bomb Dump at North Beach.
40. North Beach.
41. North Beach.
42. High side of island. Note again how the tundra covers the
island like a rug.
43. Another view of the North Beach.
44. Rick on the island’s South side “beach.”
2. Ops/Flight Line Building.
1. Rick Cochran at the NWA "Hotel."
3. NWA personnel; Ramp Operations, Radio Operators, and
Weather Forecaster.
4. Rick at the Radio position and the NWA Station Manager.
45. "Fish Bones," as Rick has labeled this photo [It appears to
be the vertebrae of a whale?]. On the south side of the island
there was an earthen ramp leading up from the sea to a higher
point on the land. There were many whale bones and vertebrae
section scattered all over the place. I am holding up a couple. I
was told this was the area where either the Aleuts or the
Russians (or both??) butchered out their whale catch. We left
everything, all the bones, etc, just where we found them.
Probably some history here.
Current Update: 06/18/2022 18:48
Original Posting: 09/02/2006 07:20