Born:
03/27/1902
Died: 08/25/1980
Inducted:
10/19/1991
Robert Campbell
Reeve often said, “The weather was so bad the year that I was born
not one plane got off the ground.” Reeve and his twin brother,
Richard, were born March 27, 1902; the Wright brothers would not fly
until the next year. Hubert Reeve, the twin’s father, was the
depot agent and telegrapher for the Chicago and Northwestern
railroad that passed through Waunakee, Wisconsin. Their mother, Mae,
would die when the boys were two and, after their father remarried,
they were left to their own devices.
Bob was a voracious
reader, discovering the Wright Brothers and their successes at age
7. He studied all that he could find on flying, deciding that “the
future of the world lay in the air”. Cal Rogers, the cross-country
flier, captured the boy’s interest and provided him with dreams of
travel. By 1917 Reeve was bored with school, filled with wanderlust,
and wanted to be involved with the war.
The 15 year-old ran
away to enlist in the Army and was accepted on his second attempt at
Davenport, Iowa. After the hostilities ended he was discharged as a
Sergeant having served his entire enlistment in the United States.
While in the Army, Reeve saw his first airplane when a flight of
Curtiss JN-4 Jennies flew over Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana.
Later, while stationed at Camp Custer, Michigan he would pay $5 for
his first airplane ride, a ride that lasted all of five minutes.
Five minutes that would change his life forever.
He returned home at
his father’s urging and tried to complete high school. School held
even less interest for the Army veteran and soon he was off again,
this time to San Francisco. He joined the crew of a steamship and
sailed for China, jumping ship at Shanghai. He would find work at
the Chinese Maritime Customs Service eventually traveling to
Vladivostok. His father’s pleading brought Robert home once more
in 1921.
Bob now buckled
down, finished his high school requirements in a scant six months,
and enrolled at the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1922.
While studying there he found three air-minded classmates and soon
they were at the airport, abandoning their studies. They would all
be expelled just months from graduation but now Reeve had his
passion for flying reignited and there would be no turning back.
Traveling to
Florida and then Texas in search of flight training, by 1926 he had
earned both commercial pilot and aircraft mechanic certificates.
Finding work as a pilot was difficult so he re-enlisted in the Army.
Soon he was stationed at March Field, California where his brother
Richard was a flight cadet. He also met Nathan
Twining, a young Army officer and flight instructor who would
become a life-long friend. The military quickly lost its luster for
Bob and so at the first opportunity he again left the Army.
In 1928 Reeve was
hired by The Ford Motor Company to learn to fly its new, large
Tri-motor airplane. He completed his schooling at the Ford Flight
Training School in Phoenix and then was on his way south. Reeve was
sent to await a disassembled aircraft that would be shipped to
Guayaquil, Ecuador. Bob delivered the first Ford to Lima on August
1, 1929 for Pangara Airways, a partnership between Pan AM Airlines
and WR Grace, a shipping company. The airline offered Bob the
opportunity to fly the new long-distance mail route, Foreign Mail
Route 9, the longest route in the world. It stretched 1,900 miles
between Lima, Peru and Santiago, Chile. The aircraft for this route
were the Fairchild 71 and the Lockheed Vega. Bob preferred the
Fairchild for its dependability. "It was," he said, “the
best performer at high altitudes of any airplane I have ever
flown”. He would set two records along this route using the
Fairchild.
Reeve would also
use the Fairchild on the route between Santiago, Chile and
Montevideo, Uruguay flying over the Andes at altitudes exceeding
23,000 feet without oxygen. While flying the mail he met several old
timers who told him tales of Alaska, its gold and of flying
possibilities there. It wasn’t long before Reeve was feeling that
pull to move once again. After a minor landing accident involving a
Lockheed Vega he was on his way north.
A short visit home
turned into a longer stay when Reeve fell through thin ice on a
hunting trip. Soaking wet he hiked the four miles for home.. What
Reeve first thought a cold and then muscular rheumatism turned out
to be a bout of polio. The effect on one leg would trouble him for
years. After spending a month in bed, he packed up and headed west,
stowing away on a steamer bound for Anchorage. Finding too many
pilots there for his liking he heeded some advice, traveling next to
Seward and then settling in Valdez during the summer of 1932.
He began his
bush-flying career in an Eaglerock biplane that he first rebuilt and
then rented from its owner, Owen Meals. His first flights would
prove to be more learning experiences than moneymaking but Reeve
persisted. Finally, he found a service that others were not
providing, taking equipment and supplies to mines located in the
mountains near glaciers. He bought his first airplane, a Fairchild
51.
Bob was always
finding unique ways to solve challenges. One solution that won him
worldwide acclaim was his technique of flying off the Valdez tidal
mud flats with skis. This method allowed him to service his mining
clients year round. Before leaving Valdez, in 1938, Reeve would make
over 2,000 glacier landings, hauling over 1 million pounds of
freight. "Glacier
Pilot" was the title given Bob Reeve by World War II
correspondent Ernie Pyle and it stayed with him throughout his life.
After
several setbacks and a short stint flying out of Fairbanks the Civil
Aeronautics Administration (CAA) hired Bob in 1941. Bob would fly a
Fairchild 71 and eventually a Boeing Model 80A, carrying more than
1,100 tons of equipment and 300 workers between April and November
to an airport construction project. Using this infusion of money Bob
bought three more aircraft (one would crash before delivery) as he
prepared for expected work for the military. In November 1942, he
signed an exclusive contract with the Alaska Communications Service.
Bob became the only civilian pilot authorized to fly in combat zones
by virtue of this agreement. Reeve and his wife Tilly, along with
their four children, moved a final time to Anchorage.
During
World War II Bob flew the entire Aleutian Chain learning its
weather, the islands and the coastlines. As the war wound down Bob
developed a plan, he would serve the Aleutians with scheduled
service. Following a tip from a military friend he learned of a C-47
being sold as surplus. He bought it and then spent $5000 converting
it for civilian use. When rumors of a steamship strike came true
Reeve was ready. He and his two pilots flew 26 round trips between
Seattle and either Anchorage or Fairbanks in 53 days. He made enough
money in those 53 days to pay off the loan for the first and buy
three additional C-47s. Reeve’s dream of an airline was about to
take off.
Bob
petitioned the CAA for approval to serve the Chain on a scheduled
basis during the winter of 1946/1947. Reeve Aleutian Airways was
incorporated on March 24, 1947 and that summer began its once a week
run over the 1,783-mile route. The airline would add aircraft as
demand would dictate operating Douglas DC-3s, DC-4s, DC-6A/Bs,
Grumman G-21 Goose, a Sikorsky S-43, Curtiss C-46s, Lockheed L-188
Electras, NAMC (Japan) YS-11A, Boeing 727s, Lockheed 10, a Helio-Courier
H-250, and a Beechcraft D-50 Twin Bonanza.
Reeve
was an avid outdoorsman and loved to share Alaska with his friends.
He would often host Jimmy Doolittle, Nate
Twining, and Hoyt Vandenberg on
hunting excursions. During a 1948 hunt Reeve would shoot a world
record Brown Bear, a record that would stand for a number of years.
He was awarded the Sagamore Hill Medal from the Boone and
Crocket Club in recognition of that success.
In 1952 Reeve was
invited to run for territorial governor but decided against it due
to possible conflicts with the airline. Robert C. Reeve was named
“Alaskan of the Year” in 1972, inducted into the National
Aviation Hall of Fame in 1975, and inducted into the International
Aerospace Hall of Fame in 1980. Robert C. Reeve would die in his
sleep on August 25, 1980. The Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum
inducted Robert C. Reeve into the Alaska Aviation Pioneer Hall of
Fame during ceremonies on February 25, 2005.
The
airline couldn't withstand the effects of increased competition,
deregulation and the continued difficulties of flying to the
Aleutians. Reeve Aleutian Airways stopped scheduled air service
December 5, 2000, after nearly 70 years.
Read
more about Robert C. (Bob) Reeve in The Bush Pilots, a volume
in the Epic of Flight series by Time-Life, Glacier Pilot by
Beth Day or Flying Beats Work by Stan Cohen.
|