
C-47 Placid Lassie
U.S. Army Air Force
Our C-47, Placid Lassie
is a real war hero and a veteran of D-day and operations Market Garden
(Netherlands), Repulse (the relief of Bastogne) and Varsity. Read about
her history below!
Book Placid Lassie for your air event
To help keep Placid Lassie flying, please donate
Her History
For an in-depth history, click HERE

July 1943
Built
in Long Beach, California by the Douglas Aircraft Company as a C-47, US
Army Air Force order number AC-20669. Her contract number (or serial
number) was 9926. On July 26, 1943 she was turned over to the U.S.
Government and assigned the military registration number 42-24064. The
cost to build her was $109,683.
From Long Beach she was flown to:
• Baer Field (Fort Wayne, IN) on July 29, 1943
• Daggett Air Base (13 miles east of Barstow, CA) on July 31, 1943
• Bookley Field (near Mobile, AL) by August 8, 1943

August 1943
Assigned to the 74th Troop Carrier Squadron (TCS), 434th Troop Carrier Group (TCG). The 74th was activated on February 19 1943 in Alliance, NE.

July 1943 to Nov 1945
U.S. Army Air Force
• South Atlantic crossing (Sept. 23 to Oct 18, 1943)
• Operation NEPTUNE (June 6 1944)—Normandy Invasion
• Operation MARKET GARDEN September 17- 25 1944) – Netherlands
• Operation REPULSE (Dec. 23-25, 1944) – Relief of Bastogne
• Operation VARSITY (March 23, 1945) Rhine Crossing
• South Atlantic crossing (June 22-July 6, 1945)

Pictured is 1st Lt. Richard Lumm, the pilot of Placid Lassie during World War II. He survived the war.


1945
After WWII, Placid Lassie was flown to the Reconstruction Finance Company in Walnut Ridge, AR on November 19, 1945. The RFC was a U.S. Government company with the mission to dispose of about 150,000 WWII aircraft via storage, sale or scrapping.
1946
Purchased by NATS Air Transport Service, December 6, 1949
Oakland,
CA had been a hub of the Naval Air Transport Service (commonly referred
to as NATS) during World War II and is likely the origin of the name of
Placid Lassie's new owners. NATS Air Transport Service soon had
financial difficulties, didn't pay taxes resulting in Placid Lassie
being seized by the IRS in late 1948. She was then sold to Placid
Lassie's mortgage holder on February 24, 1949 and then resold to a
person in Los Angeles on March 3, 1949.

1949
Purchased by West Coast Airlines, May 16, 1949
West
Coast Airlines began operations in November 1946 for the purpose of
carrying passengers and mail based out of the Pacific northwest. WCA
bought C-47s, converted them to DC-3 specification, and were based out
of Boeing Field near Seattle, WA. WCA flew routes from Seattle to San
Francico and to Boise, ID. Placid Lassie was the sixth aircraft in the
WCA fleet numbered #106. WCA became Air West and phased out their DC-3
fleet in 1968.


1969
Purchased by Aero-Dyne Corp, June 10, 1968
Aero-Dyne
was founded in 1965, offered aircraft charters and aircraft
maintenance, and may have used their DC-3 aircraft for type rating
training. Aero-Dyne purchased Placid Lassie from Air West along with
most of the former Air West DC-3 fleet. Areo-Dyne operated out of Renton
Field in Renton, VA, until 1985.


1984
Purchased by Saber Cargo Airlines, April 12, 1984
Saber
Aviation/ Saber Cargo Airlines was based out of Charlotte, SC. At least
six DC-3s are known to have been with Saber over the years. Saber had
financial difficulties and went bankrupt 2003. Placid Lassie was
repossessed by the bank holding her mortgage on April 30, 1992 based on
breaches of the loan agreement dating back to June 1989.


1992
Purchased by Express Air Inc, July 5, 1992
Express
Air Cargo was a charter company run by Jurmie E. Watkins and Dennis G.
Mount based on Simpsonville, SC. The company was formed on March 16,
1990 and dissolved on March 19, 2000.


2000
Dodson International Air
Dodson
International Air was based at Covington Municipal Airport, Georgia. In
the late 1990s Dodson was operating four DC-3s, including Placid
Lassie. Lassie was still owned by Express Air, so she must have been
leased to Dodson. Circa 2000 Placid Lassie had major engine issues and
was parked due to lack of funds for repairs. The FBO at Convington
field, Dixie Jet Services, Inc eventually sued Mr. Watkins and Mr.
Mount. The court awarded ownership of Placid Lassie to Dixie Jet on
March 10, 2008. In the mean time Placid Lassie had sat in tall weeds
at the edge of the ramp for a decade.

2010
Restoration
In
2010 was the the 75th anniversary of the first flight of the DC-3.
Clive Edwards, a DC-3 restoration expert, and James Lyle were determined
to find a “dead” DC-3, and return it to flight status. Their goal was
to complete the restoration and fly it to Oshkosh AirVenture for the
75th anniversary celebration. After considering many candidates across
the nation and the Caribbean, they decided to acquire Placid Lassie. On
May 13, 2010 Wells Fargo Bank became the owner of Placid Lassie acting
as the agent for Mr. Lyle. A Union Jack flag was painted on the
fuselage and she was named Union Jack Dak.
Seven weeks before
AirVenture 2010 in Oshkosh, the restoration crew arrived in Covington
and began their herculean task. The DC-3 was pulled out the weeds, wings
removed, engines overhauled. Since the log books were missing all
Service Bulletins and Airworthiness Directives had to be applied. They
worked 17 hour days, 7 days a week. Their motto was "No sleep 'til
Oshkosh."
After two successful test flights, Union Jack Dak triumphantly arrived at AirVenture mid-week.

Clive Edwards raced to restore “Union Jack Dack” in time to attend EAA AirVenture’s 75th Anniversary of the first flight of the DC-3
2017
After flying Placid Lassie for a few years and the 2014 Normandy mission, James Lyle decided that Placid Lassie needed to seen by the public more often, share her history and teach the children about World War II. He and Eric Zipkin formed a 501c3 foundation to operate Placid Lassie. They decided to name it after Ed Tunison who had recently passed. Mr. Lyle donated Placid Lassie to the new Tunison Foundation.
How Union Jack Dak became Placid Lassie
The original plan was to sell the DC-3 after Oshkosh, but the team greatly enjoyed flying the aircraft. Historical research then revealed that the DC-3 was originally a C-47 and flew for the United States Army Air Force. She was a combat veteran, and more important, a D-Day veteran. How could we sell that? The aircraft was painted in D-Day colors, but she was still named Union Jack Dak.


In
2014, James Lyle, Eric Zipkin and others flew Union Jack Dak to England
and then to Normandy for the 70th D-Day anniversary celebration. There
they met Hans den Brok, a Dutch author and expert on the C-47s of the
MARKET GARDEN operation, in which Union Jack Dak participated. Hans said
the aircraft had flown with the 74th Transport Troop Squadron, and the
one of the crew members, Ed Tunison, was still alive.
Ed was
quickly contacted and flown to Belgium so he could again see his plane.
When re-united, he informed the crew that during the war the C-47 was
known as Placid Lassie and photos were obtained. Union Jack Dak instantly became Placid Lassie.

Photograph of during WWII of Ed Tunison and in 2014.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Press the space key then arrow keys to make a selection.