Alaska News

Photographer visits historic Alaska airplane crash sites with a 'Happy End'

Photographer Dietmar Eckell received attention earlier this year when he launched a phenomenally successful Indiegogo campaign to fund publication of his coffee table book "Happy End." Looking to raise $4,000, he eventually got more than $57,000 in donations. While many news sites found his photographs of aircraft wrecks to be captivating, few noted that several of the pictures were taken in Alaska.

Eckell learned about the specific accidents profiled in his book through the website of the international Flight Safety Foundation. This is how he also verified that there were no fatalities suffered in any of the crashes, which is why he ultimately titled the book "Happy End." The database provided him with information about the aircraft type, location and the specific circumstances of the accident. For example, the Interior Airways Fairchild C-82A, which he photographed in the Interior Alaska village of Beaver, crashed in 1965 after the pilot neglected to use carburetor de-icing and both engines failed.

Over a three-year period beginning in 2010, Eckell visited Alaska and Canada, finding the planes he had read about. There are four Alaska aircraft in "Happy End," from Beaver, Allakaket, Venetie and Fort Yukon. Eckell also visited Adak hoping to obtain transportation out to Atka to photograph a B-24 that crashed 70 years ago, but was unable to do so. He plans to return to that site in the future.

His success was dependent upon the assistance of local pilots who brought him out to the sites at minimal charge. This was especially true in Fairbanks, where one commuter/air taxi owner was especially helpful. As Eckell explained in an email from his native Germany:

I have been to Alaska twice and met very cool pilots like Art Warbelow and was always impressed how supportive they were to 'strangers' who just walked up to them with questions or emailed them with requests. My normal 'procedure' for getting to the wreck up north was that I found them on the Internet, once in the area go to the local airport and ask pilots if they know the exact location. If there was no pilot around, I asked in town to get in contact with the pilots....Great people up north. Once I know the exact location, I try to hike there to get pictures from the ground.

A pilot recommended by Warbelow flew Eckell over Fort Yukon, where he was able to obtain an aerial photograph of his target -- the only crash he has not yet visited on the ground. "Art was busy, (moose season,)" explained Eckell, "... but invited me to dinner at his house with other pilots to share some locations/stories. Great guy!"

In Allakaket, Venetie and Beaver, locals took him out to the wrecks. In Beaver, he hired two local kids on a four-wheeler to act as guides.

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The photographer looks forward to returning to Alaska to add to his series. "I still have a few more wrecks (with happy endings) in Alaska that I would like to add to the series," he explains. "If one of your readers is up for an adventure and has a plane, please get in contact with me (I pay for gas and the beers after the mission is completed)."

To read more about Eckell or see his work (both aviation and otherwise), visit his website.

"Happy End," which includes photos from Papua New Guinea, Africa and Canada can be purchased directly from Deitmar Eckell. All details about shipping, etc. are found on his indiegogo website.

Colleen Mondor is a licensed pilot who worked for years as lead dispatcher for a Fairbanks-based bush commuter, coordinating flights of everything from prisoners to sled dogs to snowmachines. She has degrees in aviation, history and northern studies is author of "The Map of My Dead Pilots: The Dangerous Game of Flying in Alaska." Contact her at colleen(at)alaskadispatch.com

Colleen Mondor

Colleen Mondor is the author of "The Map of My Dead Pilots: The Dangerous Game of Flying in Alaska." Find her at chasingray.com or on Twitter @chasingray.

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