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CCI Newsletter, No. 38, 2007
Site to Shelf: Recovery of a Historic Aircraft from Charron Lake, Manitoba
by Nancy Binnie, Conservation Scientist, Conservation Research, CCI
Unpacking the first artifacts from Fokker Standard Universal G-CAJD
at the Western Canada Aviation Museum (WCAM). From left to
right: Mike Clingingsmith and Gary Styrchak (WCAM preparators)
and Al Nelson and Tony Morien (restoration volunteers).
Glass lightbulb and phenolic socket, part of the landing
lamp assembly of Fokker Standard Universal G-CAJD.
Side scan sonar image of Fokker
Standard Universal G-CAJD.
Courtesy of Ken McMillan, McQuest
Marine Sciences Limited, 2005.
Bill Thuma and Nancy Binnie examine
the landing lamp recovered from the wreck site.
On July 4, 2005, the F.A.R. Team1 (working on behalf of the Western Canada Aviation Museum [WCAM]), located a rare Fokker Standard Universal bush plane on the bottom of Charron Lake in northern Manitoba. The plane had been submerged for almost 75 years, and after such a long time in cold water had likely suffered significant deterioration. A thorough understanding of its construction materials would therefore be essential if recovery and conservation efforts were to be successful. In February 2006, Shirley Render, Executive Director of the WCAM, contacted CCI for assistance. The plane was to be raised in the summer of 2006, dismantled, and transported to the WCAM in Winnipeg. This underwater aircraft recovery would be one of only a few such projects in Canada to be planned and carried out by a volunteer group, the F.A.R. Team, rather than vocational archaeologists. CCI’s role would be to advise the recovery team and the museum.
Fokker Standard Universal G-CAJD, built in 1928, took off from Winnipeg on December 10, 1931, heading north with a cargo of supplies for a party of gold prospectors at Island Lake. It never arrived. On encountering snow squalls and poor visibility, the pilot decided to land on the frozen surface of Charron Lake to wait out the storm. When the plane touched down, its skis broke through the ice. The pilot and his mechanic escaped unharmed but were stranded for several weeks before being rescued near Little Grand Rapids as they attempted to walk back to civilization. The plane remained frozen to the lake until the following spring, when Canadian Airways Limited tried to relocate it for repair or salvage. By then the plane had slipped below the surface as the ice broke up, and the damaged plane could no longer stay afloat.
An insurance claim was filed (and paid out), and no further attempt was made to locate the wreckage.
The WCAM began its search for the plane in 1975, conducting nine expeditions over the years. These expeditions were sponsored by George T. Richardson, son of aviation industry pioneer James A. Richardson — who had owned 12 of the only 45 Fokkar Standard Universals ever built. Success finally came on July 4, 2005, when the F.A.R. Team located the wreck using side scan sonar. The plane was “parked” on the bottom of Charron Lake at a depth of 38.4 m (126 ft.).
When Shirley Render approached CCI, she was looking for information about temporary on-site preservation of metal and wood, appropriate protective packaging for the wreckage as it was transported back to Winnipeg by helicopter and transport plane, procedures for stabilization and display of the aircraft after transport to the museum, and options for conservation including associated costs. After initial discussions, it was decided that CCI could best assist by preparing a conservation plan2 that would “walk” the museum staff and volunteers through the issues and requirements for the recovery phase, surface assessment, cleaning, transport, and laboratory stabilization.
This plan would be prepared from the perspective of an archaeological recovery and would include information on the predicted condition of the fabrication materials. CCI staff3 with expertise in the treatment of waterlogged wood, corroded iron, textiles, and deteriorated modern materials would use their knowledge of these materials to develop and describe suitable treatment and handling methods for the submerged wreckage. In return, the information gained from the recovered aircraft would contribute to CCI’s understanding of how heritage aircraft wreckage deteriorates. The project was also in keeping with past CCI work involving artifacts recovered from waterlogged sites such as shipwrecks or wet land excavations.
The report that CCI subsequently prepared for the WCAM included:
- a preliminary inventory of the
known construction materials
and assembly techniques used in
the Fokkar Standard Universal
- information on the expected
structural condition of the plane
after 75 years underwater that
was obtained from video of the
wreckage taken in 2005, and from
viewing the wreckage of several
other aircraft fuselages at the
Canada Aviation Museum
- predictions of the condition and
stability of the aircraft construction
materials and structure that were
made based on discussions with
Parks Canada archaeological
conservators and scientists,
published rates of deterioration
in scientific and conservation
literature, and observations from
previous archaeological field
projects
- a detailed list of conservation
supplies for use in the field
- recommended practices for
artifact inventory
- packing methods
- special requirements for wet
materials such as paper documents
(logbooks and manuals) and
waterlogged wood
- options for treating waterlogged wood once it arrived at the museum
Recovery operations were carried out from July 2 to 21, 2006, during which time there were as many as 21 people at the Charron Lake outcamp, a fishing lodge operated by Selkirk Air. One of those present was Clark Seaborne, who had previously restored a Fokker Super Universal plane to flying condition for the WCAM. He was invaluable in identifying the recovered materials and construction details. At the invitation of the WCAM and the F.A.R. Team, I was on-site from July 8 to 12 to carry out a condition assessment of recovered materials and assist in taking inventory, packing, and preparing artifacts for transport. During this period, a number of pieces of the aircraft were raised using underwater vehicles operated remotely from the surface. These included two fragments of wood spar caps with plywood fragments, brass nails, and yellow paint (part of the wing structure); and a 4-m length of aluminum conduit enclosing electrical wiring to a polished brass landing lamp (including an intact light bulb) and a wing light. By examining these pieces, we were able to make preliminary conclusions about the condition of the solid wood, plywood, brass nails, adhesives, paint, and other materials yet to be retrieved. Unfortunately, none of the steel tubing from the fuselage was recovered at that time.
On July 12, I transported the raised pieces back to the WCAM in Winnipeg, first aboard Selkirk Air’s twin Otter float plane and then by car. The next day I described site operations at Charron Lake to museum personnel, unpacked the transported artifacts, and discussed the probable condition of the remainder of the aircraft materials based on the recovered artifacts.
Museum preparators, other staff, and volunteers were ready to receive the recovered artifacts. Led by Director of Restoration Tony Morien, they were left to carry out inventory and cleaning, to start stabilization treatments, and to develop a restoration plan that will enable the WCAM to exhibit the remains of this rare plane as soon as possible. CCI will provide a condition assessment, analysis of materials, and development of conservation treatment for materials where the museum restoration staff require assistance.
Following my departure from Charron Lake, some volunteer members of the Canadian Amphibious Search Team (CAST), a group of professional divers proficient in surface-air-supplied deep-water recovery, brought to the surface the Wright J-4 engine complete with an intact Hamilton propeller. Prior to removing it from the water, members of the F.A.R. Team photographed and videotaped the engine with its still-attached throttle controls, temperature gage, and magneto as well as other components. These fragile and easily dislocated items were then dismantled, and large and small items lifted and packed for transport.
The F.A.R. Team core members, assisted by the CAST dive team, carried out a second recovery operation in October 2006 to lift the airframe, wing section, skiis, and other dislocated pieces. Using knowledge gained from the July trip, the group assembled additional supplies and conservation materials, and carried out documentation, structural stabilization, and packing of all recovered materials. These recovery attempts were only partially successful. Some artifacts were recovered and a portion of the airframe was dismantled and lifted to a protected shallow-water location, where it will remain until the next recovery attempt scheduled for 2007.
The entire project has been documented by film crews for the WCAM, Country Canada (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation), and Mega Moves (National Geographic; Windfall Films of London, England). Information is also available in Altitude (the WCAM magazine)4 and on the Web sites of the Fokker Aircraft Recovery Team and the Western Canada Aviation Museum.
The recovery of Fokkar Standard Universal G-CAJD has been a successful collaborative project. The WCAM and the F.A.R. team benefited from CCI’s expertise in underwater artifact recovery and conservation, and gained some insight into the fragility of the wreckage and the importance of retaining the original construction materials in their original context through all phases of the project. In return, CCI gained a better appreciation of the goals of the WCAM in recovery, stabilization, and restoration of the plane. In addition, by having access to the wreckage for inspection and sampling at the time of recovery, CCI gained information that will be useful in its research project on heritage aircraft wrecks.
The Fokker Standard Universal first appeared in 1926. Of the 45 that were built, 12 were purchased by James A. Richardson for his company Western Canada Airways (which later became Canadian Airways). Flown by “bush pilots,” the planes were ideal for accessing areas of northern Canada where no roads or landing strips existed. They became one of the major workhorses of the early years of northern flying.
The plane was a single-engine, open-cockpit single-wing aircraft. It was constructed with a tubular steel airframe, and the single wing was of Sitka spruce. But this simple description does not come close to describing the actual complexity of the plane. The reality was a composite artifact constructed with steel tubing, welds, tensioning guy wires and iron turnbuckles, solid wood stringers, ribs, box-spars, plywood, glue, brass nails, and a canvas fuselage. Other materials included windshields, tin-plated copper electrical wires, electrical insulation, aluminum conduit, copper tubing, brass fuel tanks, and glass windows. An engine weighing more than 273 kg (approx. 600 lbs.) was also present, along with the associated gauges and navigational instruments.
These materials were assembled and intended to function in atmosphere — not cold water. After 75 years at the bottom of a cold-water lake, it was likely that most materials had suffered significant deterioration, although some were expected to be in good condition.
Endnotes
- The F.A.R. Team was first formed
in 1991 by Patrick Madden at the
request of the WCAM. Over the
years, he recruited a diverse
team of specialists in underwater
recovery, geophysics, and
remote sensing and underwater
photography, core members
including Annette Spaulding,
Gordon Nowicky, Ken McMillan,
and Bil Thuma. For the 2006 site
operations, diving recovery, and
transport of the wreckage back
to the museum, the core team
was assisted by John Garstang,
John Davis, Jerry Norbert, Mark
Rowsome, James Snelgrove,
and Nancy Binnie. For the
July recovery, a team from the
Canadian Forces rigged the
recovered Fokker artifacts for
airlift by Griffin helicopters to
Deer Lake where they
were transferred to
a Hercules aircraft
for delivery to the
WCAM in Winnipeg.
The October airlift
was to be carried
out by an A-Star
helicopter provided
by Provincial
Helicopters.
- Binnie, N.
Conservation Plan
for a Fokker Standard
Universal Airplane
through Recovery
Phase, Surface
Assessment, Cleaning
and Transport, and
Laboratory Stabilization
of Aircraft. CCI Report
93769. Ottawa,
ON: Canadian
Conservation Institute,
June 2, 2006.
- CCI staff who advised Nancy
Binnie (principal investigator)
or reviewed the report included
Tara Grant, Malcolm Bilz,
Charlotte Newton, David Grattan,
Cliff Cook, and George Prytulak.
- Madden, P., and A. Spaulding. “Charron Lake, Ghost-Busted!”
Altitude Vol. 31, No. 4
(Winter 2005),
pp. 4–7.