Posted on 04/18/2016 1:06:28 PM PDT by pabianice
A World War Two seaplane has been left abandoned and stranded for a while on a beach off the north Gulf Coast of the US. It the subsequent recovery operation the Catalina broke apart and has been destroyed.
The plane is a PBY-6A seaplane that was built and used during the war. The plane was being used in a new Hollywood movie starring Nicholas Cage, but during filming a minor flying complication occurred and the pilot had to do an emergency landing off the Florida shore line.
The plane landed close to the shore near the Alabama and Florida state border, and close enough to the beach that swimmers and surfers can take a look at the aircraft.
The plane was anchored to the shallow shore but has become flooded with water.
You can see some video of the airplane as salvage crews attempted to save it in the link below that was shot by local news station Fox 10. The aircraft was apparently restored specifically for the upcoming Nicholas Cage movie USS Indianapolis: Men of Honor.
Click here to see the video
Men of Honor
The PBY-6A is a twin engine seaplane built in 1945 and was being used to film a new movie about the war time disaster aboard the US Navys USS Indianapolis.
The USS Indianapolis was a Portland heavy cruiser and was named after the US city of Indianapolis in Indiana. She served in the Pacific during World War Two leading the US Navys Fifth Fleet. The ship had served throughout the US involvement in the Pacific. It was July 1945 and the war in Europe was at an end, after Hitler committed suicide at the end of April that year and German army commanders signed the official surrender to Allied forces. But over in the Pacific the Japanese held on to their positions and continued to fight the US troops.
As the USS Indianapolis made its way back to base, a Japanese Navy submarine, an I-58, located it and fired a torpedo that would sink the ship within just 15 minutes. Around a third of the almost 1200 crew went down with the ship. The remaining crew were stranded in the vicious waters of the Pacific, The Telegraph reports.
The disaster was only discovered by US authorities four days after the incident and so most of the crew perished. Only around 320 crew survived.
then you hear that high pitched scream...
We had 2 of those here at KWHP a few years back, they were being restored, and they flew regularly. I would bet this is one of them.
The Catalina is one of the most common warbirds. A lot of survivors.
The Indianapolis carried little boy, one of the nukes to Tinian.
agreed - any aviation mechanic of the USCG during WWII would have it back in the air in 24 hours.
Hooper ya idiot! Starboard! Ain’t you watchin’ it?
Indeed!
Dang it
My Dad flew in those in the Navy.
I got to ride in one when I was a kid (they were used in Alaska to ferry passengers to Islands, and those bubble windows are not watertight, I got soaked on landing)
it is obvious the barge crew didn’t know what they were doing. More than likely they were told it was salvage and made no effort to save it. Sad!
..Just watched Con Air take the Vegas strip out...
And there’s the 67 Corvette Stingray that fell from the sky. Enough to make a grown man cry.
That picture sure looks worse than the picture in #1. That said, I have flown aboard aircraft that had previously crashed badly, requiring rebuild of major sections of wing and fuselage.
Nothing some duct tape and a couple bungee cords can fix!
Seen one eat a rocking chair one time.
I’ll never wear a life jacket again.
I think they would be awful noisy with the engines right overhead.
Never cared for Con Air. The Rock on the other hand, I like a lot.
There aren't many naval aviators that haven't had a mishap at the Flora-Bama.
LOL my wife and I had lunch there two years ago on vacation.
It was really HOT outside.
She refused to look at all the ladies bathroom stalls to see if Jagger had really autographed them.
Just used this to put it back good as new.
https://www.5secondfix.com/
Best movie momologue EVAH.
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