So many aircraft went down during the Second World War that it would be difficult to calculate the total. One was a Lockheed P-38F Lightning, a zippy little fighter with many uses. Unlike other aircraft, it was eventually recovered from where it fell 50 years prior, having been trapped in a vast sheet of ice in Greenland, earning it the nickname Glacier Girl.
Bad weather seals Glacier Girl‘s fate
Not much is known about Glacier Girl‘s combat history before the fateful night of July 15, 1942. She was one of six P-38s with the 94th Fighter Squadron, 1st Fighter Group, along with two Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses, returning from Operation Bolero. They were supposed to travel back to Britain, but bad weather made that impossible. Instead, the aircraft were forced to land in Greenland, where their airstrip was nothing more than an ice field.
Although some of the landings were less than textbook, all the airmen survived. They were fortunate enough that the two B-17s flying with them were able to stay in the air a little longer and transmit S.O.S. signals. However, they, too, eventually had to land on the icy terrain.
The 25 airmen stayed together for nine days, split between the two bombers, while awaiting rescue. Food and other supplies were dropped on the third day, and they were eventually rescued by dogsled and taken to a town for evacuation.
An incredible discovery
The aircraft they left behind weren’t so lucky, becoming nothing more than part of the ice in the years and decades that followed. A rescue mission was attempted a year later, but officials determined they were too damaged to fly and decided to leave them.
It wasn’t until 1981 that the Greenland Expedition Society, founded by Pat Epps and Richard Taylor, decided to try and find the aircraft. They’d heard the incredible firsthand story of their landing from pilot Carl Rudder and decided to investigate. They put together a large team of volunteers and embarked on what they thought would be a simple mission. As it turned out, there was absolutely no evidence of the aircraft anywhere on the ice field.
In 1988, they were finally successful, having gone back to the crash site with the proper radar systems.
Glacier Girl has become a popular airshow attraction
It only took a few days, but the team were able to find all eight aircraft. The only problem was they lay beneath 264 feet of ice.
Glacier Girl was eventually recovered, thanks to the help of the “Gopher,” a Thermal Meltdown Generator that could melt thick layers of ice. The aircraft was raised in 1992, 50 years after it first landed in Greenland.