James A. Michener wrote the novel The Bridges at Toko-ri from his
experiences as a war correspondent with the Seventh Fleet in Korea, dispatching
stories on life aboard the carriers Essex (CV 9) and Valley Forge
(CV 45). The novel tells the story of a civilian attorney recalled to active
duty as a reserve Naval Aviator who is shot down over hostile North Korea. The
enlisted helicopter pilot and crewman who try to rescue him are also shot down,
and all three end up in a ditch fighting for their lives. Following Michener's
death in 1997, the Library of Congress released the notes and journals that he
compiled during the war, revealing many of the real characters and events behind
the scenes of the popular story.
Soon after his arrival aboard Valley Forge in January 1952, Michener
witnessed what was to become the central theme for his book. Early on 8
February, Rear Admiral John Perry, Commander Carrier Division 1, and his staff
were alerted to engage in a possible rescue attempt of an escaped prisoner of
war (POW) pilot, Lieutenant (jg) Harry Ettinger of Composite Squadron (VC) 35,
who had been shot down in December 1951. Friendly guerilla forces removed the
ailing Ettinger from a POW camp and took him to the Wonsan area, where they
contacted U.S. intelligence units for a possible rescue.
It was a routine job for Chief (AP) Duane Thorin and Petty Officer Ernest
Crawford, who manned the duty HO3S-1 helicopter aboard Rochester (CA 124)
that morning. A member of the intelligence group replaced Crawford, and the
HO3S-1 was loaded with supplies for delivery to agents on the ground. As
Ettinger climbed aboard at the rendezvous point, the helicopter crashed.
Meanwhile, the rescue combat air patrol (RESCAP) aircraft overhead were under
heavy fire. Lt. John P. McKenna of VC-3 was fatally shot down in an F4U-5N
Corsair, and four AD Skyraiders were forced to land due to battle
damage. An HO3S-1 from Greer County (LST 799) was launched to try to
reach Thorin, Ettinger and the crewman but was riddled with bullets. After two
attempts the stricken helicopter departed the scene, safely landing aboard
St. Paul (CA 73).
An hour later, four AD-3s from Fighter Squadron (VF) 194 and two F4Us from
VF-653 led by Lieutenant Commander Robert Schreiber, CO of VF-194, were
scheduled to hit three railroad bridges on the Kowon-Yangdok-Samdong-ni rail
line. Aerial reconnaissance photographs from F9F Panther photo planes
showed that the targeted stone bridges lay in a deep valley with heavily
defended guns atop surrounding hills, which required a hit-and-run attack.
A single coordinated dive-bombing attack was planned in which each AD would
drop two or three 1,000-pound delay-fused bombs, and the F4Us would drop
250-pound bombs on the bridges. Only two of the three bridges were destroyed, so
Schreiber called for a second attack, during which VF-194 pilot Ensign Marvin S.
Broomhead�s AD was hit in the engine. Too low to bail out, he landed the
Skyraider wheels up on a small, snow-covered clearing atop a mountain.
Moments before touching down a small arms bullet grazed his temple, causing him
to crash-land, breaking both ankles and a vertebra. Pulling himself out of the
cockpit, he crawled clear of the wreckage to watch his circling comrades who
were anxiously calling for the rescue helicopters from Rochester and
Greer County, which were not available.
The cruiser Manchester (CL 83), however, had an HO3S-1 that was used
for shore gun spotting, but it was more than 100 miles away. Despite the
distance, pilots Lt. Edward Moore and Marine Corps 1st Lt. Kenneth Henry
answered the call and headed inland, finding Broomhead surrounded by enemy
troops on the mountain top. Suddenly their helicopter sputtered from enemy
ground fire and rolled over next to the AD wreckage, injuring Henry in the
process. Broomhead�s squadron mates frantically called for a fourth helicopter.
A rescue attempt by an Air Force helo was driven off by heavy ground fire and
60-knot winds.
Broomhead could not get up with both ankles broken, Henry was down with a
sprained knee, and Lt. Moore was not about to leave them. With dusk approaching
and the RESCAP planes running out of gas and ammunition, hope for a rescue was
lost. All three were now alone in the darkness facing Chinese Communist troops
coming up the hill.
By the following morning, the only visible trace of the three airmen was a
large circle of what appeared to be blood in the snow near the wreckage.
Actually, it was mostly dye marker from life vests that had spread through the
snow, creating a huge red circle around the aircraft that gave the appearance of
a massacre.
James Michener news-dispatched the death scene of the three airmen from his
post aboard Valley Forge, believing that Chinese soldiers had killed them
during the night (in reality, all three survived their ordeal and were
repatriated as POWs after the war). His United Press article "An Epic in
Failure" and International News Service story titled "Heroes Fail to Save Pal"
hit the national news a week after the incident. A more detailed dialog of the
episode titled "All for One" appeared in Readers Digest in July 1952, and
became the inspiration for a magazine novel called "The Bridges at Toko-ri,"
which appeared in Life magazine on 6 July 1953. Its popularity blossomed
into the best-selling 1954 book and movie.
For many years, Cdr. Paul N. Gray, CO of Attack Squadron 54 aboard Essex,
was rumored to be the basis for The Bridges at Toko-ri's central
character, "Brubaker." However, the author's notes reveal that the character was
patterned after Lieutenant Donald S. Brubaker of VF-194 aboard Valley Forge,
whom Michener interviewed on 5 December 1951 and, like his literary
counterpart, was recalled to active duty as a Naval Reserve pilot. The final
death scene, however, was taken from the above-mentioned incident of Brubaker's
squadron mate, Ens. Broomhead.
During his stay aboard the carriers of Task Force 77, Michener wrote several
other magazine articles about Naval Aviation, such as "The Forgotten Heroes of
Korea," published in the Saturday Evening Post on 10 May 1952, in which
he expanded on the story of Cdr. Gray and others. Gray was a tenacious and
gifted AD Skyraider pilot who made low-level bombing runs against
hard-to-reach targets and inflicted great damage to the enemy, but at the cost
of some shootdowns and near-misses, prompting RAdm. Perry to ground him. The
enthusiastic response to this article laid the groundwork for a cast of other
characters that Michener would later use in The Bridges at Toko-ri,
including "Adm. George Tarrant"(based on RAdm. Perry); "CAG Wayne Lee"
(Cdr. Marshall U. Beebe, Commander Air Group 5); and "Nestor Gamidge"(Chief
(AP) Thorin).
Later, "The Forgotten Heroes of Korea" article became a hot commodity to the
movie industry. Michener had sold the rights to Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer Studios,
which in turn altered the narratives to fit another story by naval officer Cdr.
Harry Burns, "The Case of the Blind Pilot," published in the 29 November 1952
Saturday Evening Post. The combined story became the movie Men of the
Fighting Lady, which supposedly portrayed the true experiences of Cdr. Gray
and "blind pilot" Ens. Kenneth A. Schechter. In reality, the "blind pilot"
affair occurred long after Cdr. Gray had returned to the United States.
Ens. Schechter of VF-194 was flying an AD from Valley Forge north of
Kowon on 22 March 1952 and was severely wounded by an enemy shell that struck
his canopy and exploded. Blinded by blood and suffering from shock, he was
unable to see to maintain control of his airplane. Lt. (jg) Howard Thayer,
hearing his squadron mates call for assistance and observing his erratic
maneuvers, joined up on the damaged plane and literally "flew" it by radioing
instructions to the completely blinded pilot. Thayer's controlling was so
competent and reassuring that the wounded man elected to proceed to a landing
strip rather than bail out. Depending entirely on Thayer's directions, Schechter
flew the Skyraider more than 100 miles "blind" to make a perfect
wheels-up landing at a small emergency airstrip. Schechter was immediately
evacuated by helicopter to a hospital ship.
Ironically, the Broomhead story and the Schechter story were related. Two
months before Broomhead was shot down on 4 December 1951, he had received a Red
Cross telegram that his wife was injured in a car accident. He was allowed to
return to San Diego on emergency leave where he found his wife in critical
condition, disabled and a permanent paraplegic at the Balboa Naval Hospital. Six
weeks later he returned to the carrier but was shot down and presumed dead on
his third flight. Michener was aware of these facts because on several occasions
he had corresponded with George Schechter, father of "blind pilot" Ens. Kenneth
Schechter, about Broomhead's wife who was in the hospital bed directly across
the hall from his son. Michener contacted Broomhead's wife, but for whatever
reasons, he chose not to expand his storyline beyond the death climax of the
three airmen on a hilltop. Instead, he wrote about a fictitious happy "Brubaker"
in a good-bye scene with his wife in the luxurious surroundings of the Fujiya
(Fuji-san in the story) Hotel. In reality, the greater paradox, perhaps, was the
repatriation of a crippled Broomhead (his two fractured ankles and compressed
vertebra were left untreated by his captors) coming home to a paraplegic wife in
a wheelchair.
True wartime events such as these colored Michener�s perception of the war,
and provided him with a depth of experience that translated into the characters
in his renowned book. Michener wrote The Bridges at Toko-ri as a tragedy
based on true wartime events of Naval Aviation personnel he knew. It would
become the seminal novel on Naval Aviation in the Korean War.