Military Plane Uncovered In Alaska 60 Years After All 52 Aboard Reported Missing
William Edmond Mize, Jr. was just 19 years old when the C-124 Globemaster II he was flying in crashed into the side of a mountain in Alaska.
"Eddie" and 51 of his military colleagues were reported missing, and never seen from again. Until her death, Eddie's mother even believed he was still alive.
“Mother even went to Alaska in her last year or two of life," Rachel Hollbrook, Eddie's older sister, told WBIR. "We’d always thought that he was still alive."
Douglas C-124C Globemaster II 52-1004 at the Pima Air and Space Museum.
The East Tennessee family finally got the answer they were searching for. The wreckage of Mize, Jr.'s C-124 Globemaster II was uncovered in Alaska.
When Hollbrook was notified, she says memories of her brother came rushing back.
"I knew then that he wasn’t just missing that he was really dead," she said. "It just brought everything back fresh. It was just like the day it all started."
The men aboard the crashed aircraft were initially reported missing.
"It's like waiting for a funeral for 60 years," Eddie's niece, Belinda Davis told the Anchorage Daily News.
The location of the aircraft wasn't unknown. But after the aircraft crashed down, its fuel reserved caught fire. The resulting explosion triggered an avalanche, which buried the wreckage under yards of snow. The Air Force made a second recovery attempt in 1953.
They found nothing.
A U.S. Air Force Douglas C-124C Globemaster II (s/n 52-1035) in flight.
Then, an Alaska Army National Guard Black Hawk helicopter pilot spotted pieces of the aircraft in the mountains. A short investigation revealed that it was the same plane that had crashed in 1952. Its passengers could be finally laid to rest.
Hollbrook has since visited Arlington National Cemetery where her younger brother is now buried. She has nothing but distant memories of Eddie.
Those that remain, she holds dearly.
“Ohhh man, I’ve missed him,” she said.
Among those who died in the 1952 crash are the following:
U.S. Army
- Lt. Col. Lawrence S. Singleton
- Pvt. James Green, Jr.
- Pvt. Leonard A. Kittle
U.S. Marine Corps
- Maj. Earl J. Stearns
U.S. Navy
- Cmdr. Albert J. Seeboth
U.S. Air Force
- Col. Noel E. Hoblit
- Col. Eugene Smith
- Capt. Robert W. Turnbull
- 1st Lt. Donald Sheda
- 1st Lt. William L. Turner
- Tech. Sgt. Engolf W. Hagen
- Staff Sgt. James H. Ray
- Airman 1st Class Marion E. Hooton
- Airman 2nd Class Carroll R. Dyer
- Airman 2nd Class Thomas S. Lyons
- Airman 2nd Class Thomas C. Thigpen
- Airman 3rd Class Howard E. Martin
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Matthew Russell is a West Michigan native and with a background in journalism, data analysis, cartography and design thinking. He likes to learn new things and solve old problems whenever possible, and enjoys bicycling, spending time with his daughters, and coffee.