TOWNSHIP 8, RANGE 10, Maine — An ejection seat that helped save the life of a U.S. Air Force crewman involved in the crash of a B-52 bomber in 1963 has been found, officials said Tuesday.
Maine Forest Service District Ranger Bruce Reed found the piece of Maine history on a logging road on Elephant Mountain last fall and returned to it Saturday to log its coordinates for collection on Thursday.
“The seat was lying upside down in the middle of that road,” Reed said in a statement released Tuesday. “I had a pretty good idea of what it was, and it was kind of eerie finding something like this in the middle of the wilderness, knowing what happened almost 50 years ago.”
The ejection seat has held up “remarkably well for being there for 49 years,” Reed added. “Once we get it off the mountain and in the presence of those who know its true history, it will generate significant interest.”
The only degradation or damage apparent to the seat was on the top part near the head rest, he said.
Lt. Jeff Currier of the Maine Forest Service said that although the terrain where the seat was found — an area also known as Bowdoin College Grant West — is very rugged, Reed was surprised at his discovery.
“People are generally drawn to the memorial site and for some strange reason this particular piece was never found,” Currier said Tuesday.
The B-52 had left Westover Air Force Base in Massachusetts at about noon on Jan. 24, 1963, and was on a routine training mission when a malfunction caused the unarmed plane to go down in the Greenville area.
The crash killed seven airmen and left two survivors. Three crew members, including the pilot, Lt. Col. Dante E. Buli; the navigator, Capt. Gerald J. Adler; and the co-pilot, Maj. Robert J. Morrison, had time to eject. Six crew members were killed in the actual crash; Morrison was killed when his parachute hit a tree.
Reed and members of the Moosehead Rider’s Snowmobile Club, which has spearheaded the creation of a permanent memorial for the crash remains, believe the seat carried the plane’s navigator to safety, but they won’t know until a member of the crash survivor’s group identifies it, Currier said.
The crash took place as the B-52 Stratofortress-C crew was practicing routine low-level navigation — part of its training to avoid Soviet radar — in bitter winter weather, officials said.
The huge jet was at about 500 feet when it encountered turbulence. Buli tried to climb to avoid it. A loud noise like an explosion was heard, and the jet went into a 40-degree right turn, its nose pointing down.
Buli tried to level the plane, but when he couldn’t, he ordered the crew to eject, officials said.
Buli and Adler endured a night in the wild despite serious injuries and temperatures that reached minus 28 degrees Fahrenheit. The crash was found to be caused by a structural flaw with the B-52, officials said.
The ejection seat is a significant distance from the memorial site, where most of the plane’s wreckage came to rest. It also is far from the area where the survivors are presumed to have come down because of the way the ejection system was designed, Currier said.
“The chute deploys and then the chair separates from it” and from the chair’s occupant, Currier said.
Presumably the chair fell to ground somewhere between the plane’s crash area and the area its occupant landed in. Club members will make the seat part of the permanent memorial they are creating that honors the sacrifice of the crewmen.
Currier, who will be among those traveling to the site Thursday, expects the journey to be illuminating.
“It is going to be one of those times where you have to reflect that people died there,” Currier said. “This was a very scary time. It was at the height of the Cold War, and we know what they were training for. It causes pause and causes one to think about the sacrifices people make to defend their country.”



Wow. Is that really where the seat has been for 49 years? It’s hard to believe that if it was on some type of road, that nobody else had come across it in all this time. I’m just happy it’s going to where it now belongs. Thank you U.S. Armed Forces.
Hiking the A trail, we came across a small plane crash and searched wreckage. found money, wedding band and a NYpolice badge…returned it to NYPD. They do exist!
It is possible someone tried to carry it out and couldn’t, so they left it on the logging road.
You could be wrong, but I totally agree with your theory. It makes no sense that that seat was on a tote road for almost 50 years and no one found it until last year. Specifically in the crash site area. ( The whole mountain has been scoured for nearly half a century).
Does the white wire and blue wire nut look like there newer than 50 years old? Maybe its some type of conspiracy?
The wire and nut are on a piece of the fuselage not the seat. Yes those were made in the 60’s. No conspiracy but a good movie plot for you to write :)
Thank you MWS for showing the highest respect for those who serve. Locate, document and aid in recovery, you folk’s did real good !
I’m confused… The article says Maine Forest Rangers yet the pictures are of Game Wardens, both good groups of law enforcement officers, but who is recovering the seat?
Does it really matter ? It’s the respect shown and demonstrated that’s the important part.
The Forest Rangers are doing the recovery today: In fact, I plan on being with them. Stay tuned. :)
Thank Heavens it wasn’t occupied.
Do Not Go There !
I remember as a kid going through the wreckage area, in June 1963, with my Grandfather on our way to Baker Pond. There was still a parachute up in a tree and of course a lot of the wreckage, he of course knew about the crash but I didn’t, what a shock for an 11 year old.
This would be the Copilot’s seat. Major Robert Morrison ejected and was fatally injured when he struck a tree. Col. Bulli’s seat is in the collection at the Maine Air Museum and Capt. Adler’s is already at the Moosehead Riders. Surprisingly, ejection seats are not all that uncommon in the Maine woods if you know where to look.
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675042040_Rescue-operations_HH-43B-helicopter_crash-area_Military-men
Mr. Noddin: Here is a link to a website (you may already know) that has actual USAF footage of response; rescue and recovery. Many don’t know it exists. There is more footage of USAF film at the site than you can shake a stick at! Search for USAF Security Police and look for missile security. I was shocked to hear Casey Kasem providing audio of the short USAF movie clips. Thanks for all you do! signed, Todd …retired USAF
BDN: Please consider keeping the link on this comment up as it truly does show footage of the incident response, even the ambulance in the black and white photo you posted is in it.
Yes I have a copy of the footage shot by the Dow AFB Photographer from the National Archives. Note the original search HQ at the CP Station in Brownville Junction. The HH-3 Pilot seen in this footage was killed a few years later trying to rescue an injured power lineman off a mountain in Washington. His son is a fellow Aviation Archaeologist, who got his start looking for and finding his dad’s crash site. The civilians with snowmobiles in the footage are Millinocket Fire Chief Wayne Campbell and his father.
I am not at all surprised you knew of this….thanks for letting us know more! How the rescue and recoveries are handled impact many lives. I grew up near Jonesport. There was an FB-111 crash in 1980 near there. Their lives ended instantly.One of my best friends was in the 1st responding Coast Guard vessel and he told me all about it. Years later I was talking with a defense contractor near Boston and paused to comment about it when looking at his FB-111 model on his desk……he went on to say he knew all about it as he had been the lead Mission Commander. Tom and Gary had requested to go first on that “Olive Branch Run” after refueling… He said OK and switched from lead, piloting the second aircraft.
As memorial day approaches it is more than fitting to remember the seven
brave souls lost in that crash”
Lt. Col. Joe R. Simpson, Jr, Maj. William W. Gabriel, Maj. Robert J, Hill,
Capt. Herbert L. Hansen, Capt, Charles G. Leuchter, and T-Sgt. Michael F.
O’Keffe. Morrison
And all others who have fallen in the line of duty. Rest in Peace