7 April 2001. 31 died on approx. Seaman 1 class Joseph Earl Green drowned after parachuting into sea following accident to Curtiss O2C Helldiver near Oakland, Calif. 10 April 1932. The Safety Corner from Marine Corps Lessons Learned (Mar. 21 May 2001. 9 September 1915. US Naval Officer in Japan Faces Prison Over Deadly Crash. Instructor pilot LT David J. Huber killed, and student pilot ENS Joseph W. Moorehouse seriously injured. T-34C "Turbo-Mariner" of Marine Fighter-Attack Training Squadron 101 crashed 11 miles northeast of Marine Corps Air Station El Toro, California. 125 lost. Military officials tell 10 On Your Side that 43-year-old Cmdr. 4 killed. Airplane accident at Iletudy, Italy, killed Ensign Edwin S. Pou. 26 January 2005. 20 April 2002. Side wheel steamer USS Harvest Moon Wardroom Steward John Hazard killed by accidental torpedo mine explosion. Protected cruiser USS Boston steam accident during the repair of the safety valve on boiler H. Machinist 2 class Edward Lee Baker died on way to the Naval Hospital, Mare Island CA. Full-rigged training ship USS Monongahela Apprentice James A. Clayville accidentally shot while at target practice on rifle range. The case has irritated U.S. relations with a crucial military ally. Merchant ship SS Monroe sank in collision with USS Nantucket off Hog Island. 13 July 2002. 29 October 1990. Two UH-60 helicopters intermeshed turning rotor systems on the ground in Fallon, NV. In 1936, 367 sailors died in accidents; 56 in motor vehicles, 41 by drowning. 8 USS Wilmington Fireman 1 class Philip Hind killed and two other sailors scalded. They were assigned to Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323, and embarked aboard the USS Carl Vinson. 10 USS Craven boiler explosion. 14 January 2005. Battleship No. 42 drowned. At Mayport, a spontaneous-combustion fire in a rag store room in aircraft carrier USS Shangri-La (CV-38) killed one sailor in the fire party and severely injured another. Everyone was pretty excited that morning, the small boats coxswain recalled. 14 Likes, 0 Comments - USNA (@usnaaerospace) on Instagram: "CDR Lucas Kadar's last flight in the Navy, with these three aspiring officers. USS Mississippi (BB-41) cordite fire in the #2 14-inch gun turret. F/A-18C "Hornet" of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 314 crashed during a night landing on USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) in the north Pacific. This office provided Navy and Marine Corps casualty statistics for Operation Iraqi Freedom (major combat phase from 19 Mar. Battleship No. At trial, he said he had been suffering from acute mountain sicknessjust before the accident, referring to a diagnosis he had received from a doctor. Sloop of war Portsmouth steam accident. Joseph J. Loughlin, Aviation Machinist's Mate 1 class John J. Carney and Aviation Chief Machinist's Mate Harry M. Bradley. According to a Bureau of Naval Personnel Memorandum http://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/a/aviation-personnel-fatalities-in-world-war-ii.html, 3,257 naval aviation personnel were killed in an unknown number of non-combat related aircraft crashes between 7 December 1941 and 31 December 1946. Aviation Metalsmith 1 class Thomas Allen Daniels killed, and Chief Aviation Pilot Garland L. Williams injured, by accidental explosion of a projectile at the Naval Proving Ground, Dahlgren, Virginia. Casualty Branch. Fireman 1 class Joseph Shearl Myers and Chief Water Tender John Henry Tibbs died. 30 May 1914. 4 February 2009. In 1922, 202 sailors died from disease (mainly Pneumonia and Tuberculosis), 73 from drowning, 62 killed in aviation accidents, 20 from poisoning, and 8 from other injury. 28 January 1833. First outbreak in Navy occurred in January 1918 on USS Minneapolis in Philadelphia Navy Yard, subsequently spreading throughout the Navy, particularly during the outbreak of September/October 1918: 4,907 died and 146,446 sick (influenza, bronchitis and all forms of pneumonia included) 1918. Stearney also determined that the probe raised "questions regarding the safety and adequacy of the 7 meter RHIB, including adequate seating and hand-holds for passengers and crew., By November 2018, the warship Jason Dunham was operating in the Gulf of Aden and would soon return home to Norfolk. Patrick T. O'Day, and Staff Sgt. 8 August 1813. 24 marines drowned. 29 June 1909. After his release on bail, a neurologist cited "acute mountain sickness" as the reason for Alkonis's sudden loss of conscious. The sailor was killed instantly and three others were injured, but stable. CPL fell out of PT formation run and fell to the ground; died of an aneurysm. CNN . USS Farragut (DD-300) Seaman 1 class Otis Lloyd Bogar and Chief Boatswain's Mate Joseph Becker killed after premature explosion of 4-inch shell. Destroyer No. Both crewmembers ejected but one was killed. 11 Feb. 2009. 7 killed. 6 San Diego (formerly California) boiler explosion. Single-engine Otter cargo aircraft from VX-6 crashed during takeoff at Marble Point, Antarctica. 26 September 1998. 1 May 1989. 9 February 1969. 8 April 2000. SH-60F "Seahawk" from HS-14 assigned to USS Independence (CV-62) crashed at night 110 miles off the east coast of Japan. 29 December 1982. WASHINGTON A Navy SEAL commander has died from injuries he got during a training accident in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Gun Boat #164 sank in a squall in Chesapeake Bay. 24 March 2003. 6 killed, 30 injured. S-3B Viking antisubmarine aircraft assigned to Sea Control Squadron (VS-22), embarked on USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71) clipped 7 to 10-foot-high seas off Israeli coast and crashed killing the crew of four: LCDR Mark Ehlers, LT Mark Eyre, LT Mike Weems, and AW3 Wendy Potter. No one will ever know for sure why Alkonis passed out. F-14 crashed about 50 miles of the Coast of San Diego, California, during an attempted landing on USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72), killing LT Kara Hultgreen. Shed passed directly under the boat and was "struck on the head by the stern drive, which inflicted severe head trauma, the investigating officer wrote. As the driver started the truck, the Corporal jumped off the loading ramp onto the ground behind the truck. Theres a lot of people who saw something that they shouldnt have, said her mom. Both crews ejected. It had never even occurred to him that hed have to confront it. 14 July 1933. CPL Paul C. Holter III died due to a non-combat related incident at Camp Ramadi, Iraq. All four crew members ejected safely and were treated and released from the hospital with minor injuries. While anchored in Quiberon Bay, France, a cargo of ammunition loaded on merchant ship SS Florence H accidentally exploded, killing 17 members of the Armed Guard detachment. 12 February 1935. Four Marines seriously injured and six other Marines treated and then released at Camp Lejeune Naval Hospital, NC, as a result of a High-Mobility, Multi-purpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) running off Route US 17 and striking the side of a bridge. F/A-18E and F/A-18F Super Hornet from Strike Fighter Squadron 122 collided over NAWS China Lake, California. 26 October 1900. It is not intended to be a comprehensive list, rather it is intended to identify well known incidents including those involving the sinking of a commissioned ship, and specific accidents involving numerous personnel, though undoubtedly we have missed some of these type of incidents. 8 August 1952. 21 April 1952. Nassau launched helicopters in support of the search, and a US Coast Guard C-130 Search and Rescue aircraft joined the search. The city is about two hours from Yokosuka Naval Base, where Alkonis is assigned to the destroyer USS Benfold as a weapons officer. Side wheel steamer USS Tyler Boatswain's Mate John D. Seymour killed in ordnance accident. VT-2B Chief Aviation Pilots Clarence Marvin Carter killed, and Robert T. Thompson injured, in crash of Great Lakes TG-1 land plane at San Ysidro, Calif. 11 January 1932. In July of that year, Ensign Sarah Mitchell fell from a Dunham RHIB and died. Helicopter ***** operating from Bonhomme Richard (CVA-31) crashed near Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines. Fireman apprentice on aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk fell from the top bunk rack and died from a head injury. 5 mile training run and was taken to the hospital, where he later died. Asked by a prosecutor why he didnt stop at the time, Alkonis said he was so close to his destination that he felt he could make it there before resting. 9 August 2000. He carelessly continued to drive.. Gunner's Mate 3 class Roy Edward Ingle drowned after an oxygen-tank valve closed while he was trying to retrieve a torpedo in 80-feet of water. 17 June 1983. Scott Morrissey, pilot, and Mary Keiming, co-tactical coordinator; and AW1 Charles Colvin, sensor operator. 14 April 2006. 134 killed and 161 injured. 17 December 1917. 17 January 1996. Transport USS Orizaba suffered accidental explosion of 50-lb depth charge, killing Lt. Cdr. USS Forrestal (CVA-59) fire and explosions on flight deck during combat operations off Vietnam. 25 USS Barney boiler tubes blown in #1 fire room. He covered Iraq and Afghanistan extensively and was most recently a reporter at the Chicago Tribune. During dive bombing practice at Border Field, San Diego, the left wings of an F3F1 tore off at 1,500 feet and the aircraft plunged into the ground, killing Lt (jg). Approx. Several personnel on the flight deck were injured. 16 September 1976. LT William B. Lyne drowned at Norfolk, 30 April 1841. Screw Sloop USS Oneida accidently struck by the British P. & O. steamer City of Bombay off Yokohama, Japan, and sank. The pilot, LT Jonathan Nolan, was killed. Battleship No. Protected cruiser USS Olympia Coxswain John Johnson killed when 5-inch gun broke loose from gun carriage and fractured his skull. EA-6B "Prowler" returning to USS Enterprise (CVN-65) during a flight off the coast of Virginia struck an S-3 "Viking" from Sea Control Squadron 22 on the flight deck. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jonathan Clay/Navy). [Available online at http://www.defenselink.mil/]. 2010). 29 September 2000. This is a selected list of incidents not directly the result of enemy action which resulted in US naval personnel casualties, typically while these personnel were on official duty. 19 November 1930. 7 June 1945. A helicopter flew Mitchell off the ship at 11:30 a.m. and she was pronounced dead 75 minutes later at Prince Hashem bin Abdullah Hospital in Aqaba, Jordan. 24 September 1952. Annapolis MD: Naval Institute Press 1981. 112 (1869) Sea Service of Officers to be Three Years, General Order No. Petty Officer 1st Class Thomas C. Hull died on board the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in the Arabian Gulf after being medically evacuated to the carrier for a non-combat related incident. Two aviators were lost at sea when their aircraft crashed in the Atlantic Ocean. 25 October 1994. 23(?) USS S-49 (SS-160) battery explosion at New London, CT. 4 killed, nine injured. In March, four Marines died when their aircraft crashed during a NATO exercise in Norway. 7 May 2002. Iron screw steamer USS Nina, last sighted off the Capes of the Chesapeake in a gale. Airplane accident at Pensacola, Fla., killed Ensign Joy C. Bournique. PFC. Fire destroyed another Phantom and spreads into aviation stores compartment before being extinguished. 2 July 2003. Seaman Alexander Newton Dossett died from powder burns at target practice. Wish died as a result of injury received from a falling small pair of shears at the New York Navy Yard. Dogs, copilot CAPT Paul D. Barnes, aerial observer LCPL Rodolfo Guajardo and crew chief CPL Michael J. Tsoris were killed. F/A-18A crash destroyed aircraft near Fallon, NV. 27 USS Michigan powder handling accident catches Gunner's Mate Matthew Devine between two ammunition trays, killing him instantly. 22 USS Minnesota steam accident while cruising with the Great White Fleet. 6 killed. A sailor was killed in a flight deck accident involving a SH-60B "Seahawk" of Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadron Light 49 aboard USS Thach (FFG-43) in the Pacific Ocean. 6 May 1915. In 1914, 281 sailors died from disease and accidents. Three other HS-8 helos and one VAW-112 E-2C Hawkeye participated in the search effort. 30 January 1995. 7 May 1919. 31 August 1976. 132 sailors and 2 Marines died. 26 November 2004. 28, USS Princeton CVL23 War Damage Report No. The indictment alleged that Alkonis dozed off at the wheel. Secretary of the Navy Thomas Gilmer; Secretary of State Abel P. Upshur; Capt. Last seen on 8 August 1815. 18 March 1781. Cooney, David M. A Chronology of the US. Drowned. Battleship No. The date provided at the end of each entry is the date of the accident/incident, rather than the date of death of individuals who may have died subsequently to the event. Gun Boat #159 lost in Chesapeake Bay with all on board. Monitor and the C.S.S. 19, USS South Dakota BB57 War Damage Report No. The pilot was killed. 13 February 2002. A search and rescue effort was conducted after he was discovered missing during a routine muster. Destroyer No. USS New Mexico (BB-40) Aviation Machinist's Mate 1 class James Merron accidentally shot and killed upon discharge of seaplane machine gun. 12 December 1965. 19 December 1960. 26 June 2003. Battleship No. 12 May 2003. The other nine Marines in the vehicle were students at Camp Geiger. Alkonis's family says he was arrested by Japanese authorities and placed in solitary confinement for 26 days without access to a lawyer or medical examiner. Midshipman Edward Hopkinson died from fall from the mizen top of ???? Kearsarge - 19 Jun 1864, Selected Sources on the German Battleship Bismarck, The Sinking of the German Battleship Bismarck as Described in the B.d.U. Mitigating circumstances, including compensation for bereaved families, typically help reduce sentences in Japanese courts, said Mamoru Shibata, a law professor at the Nagasaki Institute of Applied Science. 27 USS Michigan gas explosion in coal bunker no. DANFS - Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Permitting Policy and Resource Management, The 9/11 Terrorist Attacks: 20 Years Later, "Ex Scientia Tridens": The U.S. During dive bombing practice, SOC-1 from Memphis (CL-13) crashed into the sea near Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Battleship No. Naval Operational History 19802010, New Equation: Chinese Intervention into the Korean War, Nixon's Trident: Naval Power in Southeast Asia, 1968-1972 by John D. Sherwood, Northern Barrage and Other Mining Activities, Notes on Anti-submarine Defenses ONI Publication No. 73 - 1905 April 18 Travel Pay, Specifications for Ship and Motor Boat Bells, Stalin's Cold War Military Machine: A New Evaluation, The Story Of The Confederate States' Ship Virginia, Strait Comparison: Lessons Learned from the 1915 Dardanelles Campaign, Strategic Concepts of the U.S. Navy (NWP 1 A), Structural Repairs in Forward Areas During WWII, Study of the General Board of the U.S. Navy, 1929-1933, Submarine Activities Connected with Guerrilla Organizations, Surprised at Tet: U.S. Great Naval Disasters: U.S. "The fire and the flooding were controlled and the submarine was stabilized early today, military officials said. Robert O. Bausch mortally injured in a fall, dying in hospital ship USS Solace. 18 August 2004. USS Oklahoma (BB-37) Seaman 2 class Peter Joseph Carini killed inside #1 turret when 14-inch gun hydraulic recoil system failed, crushing him between gun breech and shell loading platform. 23 March 2003. Naval Forces in Vietnam, 1968, Survival of the Collection of the Navy Department Library, Syria's Chemical Weapons: Issues for Congress, Target Information From CIC [Combat Information Center], Terrorism: Some Legal Restrictions on Military Assistance, Time of Change: National Strategy in the Early Postwar Era, Titanic Disaster: Report of Navy Hydrographic Office, Tokyo Bay: The Formal Surrender of the Empire of Japan, Tonkin Gulf Crisis, August 1964 - Summary, Formerly Classified Documents from 2 August - 4 August 1964, Formerly Classified Documents Subsequent to 4 August 1964, Gulf of Tonkin the 1964 Incidents [Part II], 20th Century Warriors: Native American Participation in the United States Military, Typhoons and Hurricanes: The Effects of Cyclonic Winds on US Naval Operations, Typhoons and Hurricanes: The Storm at Apia, Samoa, 15-16 March 1889, U-94 Sunk By USN PBY Plane and HMCS Oakville 8-27-42, U-162 Sunk By HM Ships Pathfinder, Vimy, and Quentin 9-3-42, U-595 Scuttled and Sunk Off Cape Khamis, Algeria 11-14-42, U-701 Sunk By US Army Attack Bomber No. In Japan, its customary to offer extrajudicial compensation for damages or injuries in an effort to apologize. 8 July 2009. New York: Warner Books, 1989. 10 September 2002. 13 September 1944. Armored cruiser No. Aircraft destroyed. 74 (1908) Establishing Ship Post Offices, General Order No. Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, crashed into a coastal Alabama field killed LT John Francis Brown. 12 July 1865. One sailor died before the fire was extinguished. "When I saw his face, I knew that we had lost," she said. 8 July 2002. TUCSON, Ariz. (13 News) - The Navy confirms the death of a sailor in Marana. 22 May 1968. Ironclad monitor USS Winnebago Landsman Samuel Parent killed in ordnance accident. Chief Boatswain's Mate Eugene Leonard Danley killed, and 11 enlisted wounded, following accidental discharge of a machine gun on wing of VS-7 seaplane moored to stern of USS Concord (CL-10). USS Mississippi (BB-41), during combat operations off Makin, Gilbert Islands, suffers cordite explosion in #2 14-inch gun turret. 3 USS Baltimore steam accident burned Machinist's Mate 2 class John Henry Stich who died three days later in the Naval Hospital at Norfolk VA. 25 May 1919. During routine gunnery practice, Battleship No. EA-6B "Prowler" from Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 135 crashed during a routine flight from USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63). Gun Boat #2 sank in gale in Chesapeake Bay. He was last seen on the evening of 12 September when the ship was underway. A collision in the Strait of Gibraltar between Kenneth D. Bailey (DD-713) and supply ship Haiti Victory kills one and hurts four. Alex Wilson covers the U.S. Navy and other services from Yokosuka Naval Base, Japan. Collier Thomas Tracy collides with seaplane tender USS Valcour (AVP-55) off Cape Henry, VA., starting a severe aviation gasoline fire. One plane crashed, killing both aircrew members; the other landed safely. Collier USS Herman Frasch sank after a collision with tanker USS George D. Henry. 3 USS Brooklyn coal dust explosion. The pilot, MAJ Patrick Gregoire, was killed. As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Mitchell eventually was brought aboard the ship on a Reeves Sleeve stretcher, which had a single hoisting attachment, meaning the she went up vertically. An F/A-18 from VFA-82 crashed in the Ocala National Forest, about 40 miles west of Daytona, FL, during a training exercise. Tokyo: 02:07. . Three crewmembers were killed when an S-3B "Viking" of Sea Control Squadron 22 crashed into the Caribbean Sea while operating from USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75). Marine Forces Pacific UC-35 crashed at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, CA. 241 Navy, 1 Marine, 5 Coast Guard and 73 civilians killed; 390 injured including 233 African-American Navy personnel. While USS Boxer (CV21) conducted flight operations off Korea, an explosion of a Panther jet aircraft (F9F) on the hangar deck caused a fire which ignited gasoline and ammunition. Ensign Sarah Mitchell's shipmates aboard the warship Jason Dunham pay their respects during a memorial ceremony at sea in August 2018. A Master Chief Petty Officer was found dead in barracks after morning physical training in Ventura Country, California. 73 (1866) Resolution of Thanks from Congress to Admiral Farragut for Mobile Bay Action, General Order No. One sailor is electrocuted while working in fireroom in USS Garcia (FF-1040). Mess Attendant 1 class Jutaro Okomoto traveling on Monroe while on leave was drowned. The aircraft continued off the angle with insufficient flying speed and impacted the water. 16 September 1951. Exactly who was punished for what remains unclear. A second woman, 53, suffered bruises to her knees and elbows. A relative of the two people killed in the crash made a statement in court. 29 March 1911. The charge carries up to seven years imprisonment in Japan. It was impossible to recover Kiel's body. In the spring of 2021, after a period of land-based assignments, the Southern California native was preparing for a deployment as a department head on the USS Benfold, a missile destroyer. 20 July 1918. A Sgt. 56 (1901) Puget Sound, Naval Station to Navy Yard, General Order No. 18 October 1799. PFC Matthew L. Bertolino died when the vehicle he was traveling in was involved in a rollover while operating as part of a combat patrol near Jalalabad, Afghanistan. 22 February 1996. Ironclad gunboat USS Carondelet Gunner's Mate James Carey killed in ordnance accident. 15 died. He's also followed Japanese custom by offering restitution to the victims' families $1.65 million. 29 March 2003. Korean War U.S. Pacific Fleet Operations. 2 February 1967. F/A-18 of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 134 overshot the runway and crash landed at Naval Air Station Miramar, California. While operating out of the Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Va., an O2C-2 land plane caught fire and crashed following a gas line rupture, killing Aviation Machinist's Mate 1 class Edward Martin McHugh. Battleship No. In June 2014, Chief Special Warfare Operator Bradley S. Cavner, 31, of Coronado died in a parachute training accident in El Centro, Calif. Geoff is a senior staff reporter for Military Times, focusing on the Navy. F-14B from NAS Oceana crashed off VA Beach. 2 February 1938. Patrol vessel USS Eagle while making passage up Delaware River was struck by a squall and capsized. He was assigned to Headquarters Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force. 14 June 1864. For months, they'd hoped a judge at an appeals court would suspend. 26 July 2002. Kevin A. Bianchi, LT. Peter Ober, Aviation Structural Mechanic 1st Class Brian P. Gibson, and Aviation Electrician's Mate 3rd Class Samuel Cox . 15 August 1868. 22 January 1863. 1st LT. Michael G. Blaisdell, a Marine F/A-18 pilot assigned to VFA-106, was killed when his Hornet crashed at approximately 1830 while he was performing touch-and-go exercises at NAS Cecil Field's outlying field at Whitehouse, FL. An Israeli-chartered liberty ferry shuttling crewmembers of the USS Saratoga (CV-60) capsized and sank in 20 seconds off Haifa, Israel, resulting in 21 drowned. USS Dolphin (AGSS-555), a Navy research submarine that holds the record diving depth caught fire and partly flooded off San Diego, California, but the 43 people aboard were rescued. Two F-14 "Tomcats" of Fighter Squadron 103, operating from USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69), collided over Mediterranean Sea. Destroyer No. 29 January 1905. Fr nhere Informationen zur Nutzung Ihrer Daten lesen Sie bitte unsere Datenschutzerklrung und Cookie-Richtlinie. Two killed, four injured after collision between Columbus (CA-74) and Floyd B. All 4 crew members ejected approximately 130 miles west of North Island and were recovered after less than an hour in the water by an SH-60F belonging to HS-8, also on board Nimitz. During 1920, 1,000 sailors died from disease and accidents. Whale boat capsized and Seaman Alexander Flood drowned. 17 January 2002. 8 June 2005. Fleet Hospital Eight treated 1380 patients; 1 died. Stern wheel steamer USS Nymph Seaman Charles Kalanski killed in ordnance accident. I am not saying the Japanese justice system has no issues, but its just natural that suspects are not allowed to see lawyers, said Takashi Shinobu, a political scientist at Nihon University in Japan. 23 August 1814. The commander of one of the Navy 's elite SEAL teams died Tuesday after a training accident in Virginia Beach, Virginia, the service announced Wednesday. 1 June]. Lt. (jg) Dick Rinaldo Downer and Aviation Pilot 1 class John Francis Hogan drowned following crash of Martin PM-2 seaplane off Del Mar, Calif. 29 July 1932. The dead include: Yeoman 3rd Class Shingo Alexander Douglass, Gunner's Mate 2nd Class Noe Hernandez, Sonar Technician 3rd Class Ngoc T Truong Huynh, Personnel Specialist 1st Class Xavier Alec Martin, Fire Controlman 1st Class Gary Leo Rehm Jr., Gunner's Mate Seaman Dakota Kyle Rigsby, and Fire Controlman 2nd Class Carlos Victor Ganzon Sibayan. Screw gunboat USS Little Rebel Seaman Willard Brown killed by accidental discharge of musket. On May 29, 2021, with the assignment looming, his family set out for an excursion of Mount Fuji hiking and sightseeing. Aviation Pilot 1 class Arthur Thomas Mead and Donald Theodore Surber killed in crash of Great Lakes TG-2 land plane in Coronado Roads, Calif. 25 May 1932.