by Neal Brinneman and Carol Brinneman
God Delivers Neal from Three Plane Accidents My husband Neal learned to fly while serving in the army, then crashed his way into the mission field.
In the early 60’s Neal bought a
Taylorcraft and flew west with his brother Rex. In Cody, Wyoming, they
gassed up the plane and were planning on landing in Yellowstone, 200
miles away. With only a small 12-gallon tank, they took the most direct
route instead of following the highway through a pass.
Climbing
out of Cody, they headed towards a valley between two mountains, but
then the valley started climbing too! Approaching the maximum altitude
of the plane at 9,500 feet, they found themselves flying closer and
closer to the ground. Turning back, headed the plane inevitably into
the mountainside. They banged down through the trees, the wings taking
the brunt of the force, and went nose first into the ground. Neal
turned off the ignition and they exited the plane as quickly as
possible since gas was dripping onto the hot motor. When nothing caught
fire, they got out their suitcases and started down the trail. Neither
was seriously hurt.
Returning to Michigan, Neal bought a Piper
Vagabond. This model had an 85 HP engine and cruising speed of 102 MPH,
an improvement over the Taylorcraft at 65 HP and 92 MPH. The next
winter he was flying from Indiana to Michigan when freezing rain iced
up the plane. It kept getting heavier and heavier until he could not
keep it in the air at full throttle. He was forced to drop into a small
cow pasture, skidding sideways, the propeller catching on a fence and
throwing the tail up onto the fence too.
The next spring, Neal
waited for a windy day to fly the same plane to a nearby town to get
gas. He hoped the wind would get him there quickly and that he would
not run out of gas. As he landed at the airport, the motor died, a
common occurrence with that plane. He jumped out, restarted it, and got
back in to taxi to the hangar, forgetting to attach his seatbelt. He
could not get the tail to come around into the wind so he accelerated
to forcefully flip it around. As he did that, the outer wing started
flying. He then gunned the motor to keep from falling back onto the
ground. His plan was to fly out and land again. It turned out that the
wing had been lifted by a mere gust of wind. After he accelerated and
ascended a bit, the gust died and the plane stalled, dropping out of
the sky nose first and falling onto its back. Neal banged his head on
the roof, but suffered no injury.
He went to get the airport
manager to help turn the plane over on its wheels and roll it up to the
hangar. The manager said that was the first time he had ever seen a
plane of that type make a “wheels up landing.” The plane was ruined.
This
is definitely not the story of a frustrated wannabe mission pilot! The
planes had only provided some weekend fun for a confirmed
bachelor-math-teacher. But the third wreck got Neal’s attention. He had
been called to serve in missions years before, but just hadn’t gotten
around to obeying God. He said, “I felt God had protected my life in
spite of my foolishness, and so he must have something for me to do. I
went straight to the mission headquarters of the United Brethren in
Christ and told them I was ready to go. They sent me to Sierra Leone as
a teacher-principal of a high school.” Four years later, Neal joined
Wycliffe and in 1972 left for Togo as a Bible translator at the ripe
age of thirty-seven.
Seven years later, he gave up bachelorhood
and planes forever when he married me in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire. I’m
glad my husband is not a missionary pilot, aren’t you?
August 11, 2002 |