109th Airlift Wing commemorates first
South Pole landing

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A U.S. Air Force LC-130
Hercules from the New York Air National Guard's 109th Airlift Wing
touches down near McMurdo, Antarctica. The first plane landed there 50
years ago. (U.S. Air Force photo)
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11/3/2006 - STRATTON AIR NATIONAL
GUARD BASE, Scotia, N.Y. -- An LC-130 Hercules from the New
York Air National Guard's 109th Airlift Wing touched down at the South Pole
on Oct. 30 to commemorate the first plane landing there 50 years ago.
On Oct. 31, 1956, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Gus Shinn landed
a ski-equipped R4D-5 (a Navy version of the DC-3) named "Que Sera
Sera" at the South Pole. On that landmark day, four decades later, with
temperatures near minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit, Shinn kept the engines
running while Navy Adm. George Dufek stepped out of the plane to stand at
the Pole.
This week, Skier 00, of the 109th Airlift Wing in
support of Operation Deep Freeze and piloted by Air Force Maj. Carlyle
Norman, continued the tradition with the landing of a ski-equipped LC-130
in a ground temperature of near minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit, 109th AW
officials said.
"This commemorative landing signifies much
more than just the first aircraft landing at the South Pole," Air
Force Col. Anthony German, 109th AW commander, said. "It is a
testament that our U.S. military is uniquely equipped to support the
National Science Foundation and U.S. Antarctic Program in its mission to explore
Antarctica. The 109th Airlift Wing is proud to be a part of this
legacy."
From 1955 until 1999, the Navy's Antarctic
Development Squadron 6 flew various aircraft, including LC-130s, in support
of the U.S. Antarctic Program. In 1998, at the Navy's request, the Air
Force and Air National Guard took over command of Department of Defense
support to the program. The Navy unit continued to augment the Air National
Guard with LC-130 flights until it was disestablished in March 1999.
The 109th Airlift Wing is the only unit in the
world to have the ski-equipped LC-130 aircraft with responsibility for
supporting scientific research in the northern and southern polar
regions.
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