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Fallen Eagle |
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DESCRIPTION |
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16 x 11.5 Inch Collector Size Unframed Lithograph $40.00
The McDonnell Douglas A-4 Skyhawk was designed by Ed Heinemann as a successor to the Skyraider attack bomber.The prototype aircraft first flew in 1954. The diminutive Skyhawk was only 42 feet in length with a carrier friendly wingspan of 27 feet. The Skyhawk was capable of speeds close to 700 MPH and was produced in several variants through 1979. The Skyhawk was utilized extensively in Vietnam for ground attack and support. As depicted in Stan Stokes' painting entitled Fallen Eagle the A-4 of a young Navy aviator Everett Alvarez has just taken off from the USS Constellation at 2:30 PM on August 5 1964. Alvarez a native of Salinas California had attended the University of Santa Clara before joining the Navy. It was a day that Alvarez would not soon forget. About midnight that day the destroyers USS Maddox and USS Turner Joy were under attack from North Vietnamese patrol boats in international waters sixty miles off the coast of North Vietnam. Alvarez' unit the VA-144 Roadrunners had been scrambled to assist the destroyers but terrible weather conditions prevented any action. Washington decided to retaliate against these attacks by authorizing the first bombardment of North Vietnam on August 5 1964. On that day twenty-two aircraft from the USS Ticonderoga attacked North Vietnam military targets at 1:15 PM. Only one aircraft was damaged during this first wave and its pilot successfully made it back to an airfield in South Vietnam. The USS Constellation would provide a second wave involving 10 Skyhawks 4 Skyraiders and a single F-4 to provide fighter cover. Alvarez' target was the harbor at Hon Gai where his mission was to destroy any military patrol boats in the harbor. The lumbering Skyraiders were launched early and Alvarez was the first of the ten Skyhawks off the Constellation. The Skyhawks rendezvoused at 20000 feet before climbing to 30000 feet for the seventy-five minute flight to the target area. Alvarez' A-4 was equipped with a belly pod of 19 rockets. The Skyhawks streaked in over the harbor at 500 MPH in a shallow dive. Four torpedo boats and a larger coastal patrol ship were in the harbor. Alvarez made two passes over the harbor and as he was passing over the southern edge of the town he saw a yellow flash to the port side of his windscreen accompanied by a popping sound. Seconds later the A-4 shook violently and all the warning lights came on. The cockpit began to fill with smoke and the stick froze. With a final radio transmission "I'm getting out! I'll see you guys later!" Alvarez pulled his ejection ring. Within seconds he was in the water. Picked-up minutes later by some very nervous fisherman Everett Alvarez would become the first pilot shot down and captured over North Vietnam. It would be eight-and-one-half years later that Alvarez would be released having endured hardships which would have broken anyone of less than the highest faith and courage. Everett Alvarez retired from the Navy in 1980 and was later a Deputy Director of the Peace Corps and Deputy Director of the Veterans Administration. |
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