Eagle Biography
David F. Fowler
Dave Fowler flew over 30,000 hours in everything from the Piper J-3 Cub to the
Douglas C-54 Skymaster and Consolidated B-24 Liberator. Born in
Coleman County, Texas, in 1918, Fowler grew up fascinated and in awe of the airplanes
that occasionally flew over the family ranch. After completing high school in 1936, he
landed a job with Pan American Airways in Brownsville, Texas. By 1940, he earned an
airplane and mechanics license and then headed to California where there were many
aircraft companies.
Fowler worked first for Douglas, then Lockheed. In his spare time,
he learned to fly and used much of his pay to build time in the air. When the Japanese
attacked American, British, and Dutch forces in the Pacific, he moved to Consolidated
Vultee and joined their Consairways Division. From 1942 to 1945, he flew more than 100
trips, island hopping across the Pacific to Australia, New Guinea, and the Philippines.
As a flight engineer, he often flew as copilot and built up over 4,000 flight hours in
transport versions of the Consolidated B-24 and PBY Catalina contracted to the
USAAF Air Transport Command.
The flights were made with few communication and navigation
aids and little weather information. There was always the threat of enemy fighters.
Fowler was wounded and the navigator was killed when an enemy aircraft attacked just
after he landed on Biak Island. After the war, Fowler worked as a copilot for the Kaiser
Company, but in 1947, returned to Asia as a pilot for Pacific Overseas Airways, Siam
Limited (POAS) in Bangkok. For POAS, he flew "blockade running" Douglas DC-3
and DC-4 transports in and out of the "Republic of Indonesia." The Netherlands
was intent on regaining control of its former colony (Dutch East Indies) and established
an air and sea blockade.
Fowler became well known to the Dutch as he eluded their
patrols on 12 missions. Flights were often made at night to rough runways or roads lit
by signal fires. On his last mission, Fowler transported tons of Indonesian gold and
silver to banks in Hong Kong. In 1950, Fowler became a consultant for the newly
independent Indonesia. He personally established an air service and also served as the
chief pilot and chief of maintenance for the newly formed Air Wing of the National
Police. In 1956, after supporting anti-Communist Indonesians opposing Sukarno, Fowler
shut down his company.
He later ran an aviation company in Iran for three years before
returning to Southeast Asia to fly. After Sukarno was deposed, he returned to Indonesia
in 1966 and established Zamarud Air Services, and later, Safari Air Services. In the
late seventies, he flew for Conoco servicing their oil drilling operations in Chad. In
1979, Fowler left aviation and returned to his native Texas.
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| More About The Eagle: |
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1999
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