Vernon Boyd, Admiral Byrd, and Operation Highjump
I was researching my grandfather Vernon D. Boyd and what I found made me feel good, and other things, not so good.
Let’s start with the not so good, at least according to this 2002 interview I found a transcript of this oral interview with Colonel John Roscoe, conducted as part of the Polar Oral History Project of the American Polar Society and the Byrd Polar Research Center of The Ohio State University on a grant from the National Science Foundation. The interview was taken at Colonel Roscoe's home in Portola Valley, California, by Brian Shoemaker on the 18th of September 2002.
Here’s what I found at page 47 of the transcript I didn’t know.
Major Vernon D. Boyd - initials V.D., which was interesting. I think I told you, he was the only Marine officer I ever knew that owned a whorehouse.
What I found next made me feel good about Vernon Boyd, Admiral Byrd and Operation Highjump. A little background on the movie The Secret Land and Operation Highjump.
In the summer of 1946 Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal approved the largest naval task force, 13 ships and 4,700 men, since the end of the Second World War to sail from Norfolk Virginia to the cold and ice capped seas of the Antarctic to map that unknown and frozen continent as well as monitor the vast and untapped natural resources hidden under its frozen surface.
The film "The Secret Land" is a documentary narrated by actors Robert Montgomery Robert Taylor and Van Haflin about that fabled expedition call Operation Highjump and the men who were on it. This film documents the largest expedition ever undertaken to explore Antarctica. The expedition, code named "Operation High Jump," was made by the U.S. Navy Admiral Richard Byrd and his party visits an old buried U.S. base camp on Antarctica.
Led by Admiral Richard E. Byrd and Rear Admiral Richard H. Cruzen Operation Highjump did what it set out to do, by mapping some 1.3 million square miles of the unknown Antarctic continent. There also were several casualties among the ships and men on that voyage. The most noted was the USS Sennet a submarine that was crushed in the ice off the US base Little America.
Leaving from the US port in Norfolk to the southernmost part of the Pacific Ocean to Scotts Island and Little America on the Antarctic land mass. Aircraft carrier USS Philipine Sea the flag ship of task force 63, Operation Highjump, had on its deck six giant RD4 supply planes who, with Admiral Byrd aboard, flew over the frozen wastes of that continent and photograph it.
In the end the expedition was considered to be a major success but over the years it has all but been forgotten by the American public but It's good to see that the movie "The Secret Land" is still around and is being broadcast periodically on TCM to rekindle interest in that major post WWII event.
Even though Operation Highjump was conducted over fifty years ago many of the photographs and documents on that expedition are still classified and there's the strange explanation of Admiral Byrd's missing three hours, when he flew over the South Pole in February 1947. Having the American public told that Byrd's RD4 had to jettison most of its equipment to avoid losing altitude and slamming into the dangerously high Antarctic mountain ranges, that in some places are as high as 20,000 feet, that had communications cut off between him and the US base on frozen Antarctic coast. That explanation didn't wash with a lot of the people who listened to the Admirals radio broadcast as he flew over the pole.
The broadcast by Admiral Byrd suddenly went dead for a number of minutes and there are those who think that it was done on purpose, by the US Navy, to keep the American public from knowing just what he saw there.
There was one fantastic discovery by the Byrd task force that didn't escape the attention of the American media and public as well as the lens of the movie camera. That was the discovery, off the Shacklenton Ice Shelf in Wilkes land, of a place later named the Bunger Oasis.
Flying over the ice and snow US Navy Let. Commander David E. Bunger spotted filmed and landed on this 300 square mile patch of land with tricolor freshwater lakes that were totally ice-free right in the middle of the blistering cold and freezing Antarctic! The lakes in the Bunger Oasis were the colors, red blue & green, of the vast quantities of colored algae in them and even now, over a half century after the Bunger Oasis' discovery, nothing in the world of science has been able to explain it.
The author’s grandfather Vernon Boyd is featured in this excerpt from The Secret Land a 1948 Movie about Antarctica. Admiral Byrd and Operation Highjump. Visit the link below to view the footage: https://lnkd.in/ewtHfEx
"Admiral Richard E. Byrd and his party ride Weasels visits an old buried U.S. base camp of "Little America" #1 and #2, from the 1930's on Antarctica. Captain Vernon Boyd of U.S. Marine Corps enters inside a ventilating hatch. Food and supplies preserved for several years beneath the ice are taken out. Admiral Byrd exits the hatch."
#polar #ice #explore #navy