Pilots – Listorati https://listorati.com Fascinating facts and lists, bizarre, wonderful, and fun Sun, 23 Nov 2025 04:54:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://listorati.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/listorati-512x512-1.png Pilots – Listorati https://listorati.com 32 32 215494684 Top 10 MIA Fighter Pilots Whose Planes Were Finally Found https://listorati.com/top-10-mia-fighter-pilots-planes-found/ https://listorati.com/top-10-mia-fighter-pilots-planes-found/#respond Tue, 28 Oct 2025 08:50:42 +0000 https://listorati.com/top-10-mia-fighter-pilots-whose-planes-were-found/

Welcome to our top 10 MIA roundup, where we explore the astonishing stories of fighter pilots whose aircraft were recovered after years of mystery. From the skies of World War II to the jungles of Vietnam, each tale blends daring combat, relentless search efforts, and heartfelt closure for families left waiting.

10. Recovery Of William Shank

William Shank crash site remains - top 10 MIA

Lieutenant William W. Shank’s comrades last saw him when his P‑38 Lightning recovered after a dive. Nobody saw where he went after that because they were involved in a heated sky battle.

As they fought over Germany during World War II, Allied bombers were on their way to Bremen when they encountered up to 50 German aircraft. Years after the war, the US military set out to find their missing personnel in Germany. One of the names was 24‑year‑old Lieutenant William Shank.

The coordinates of his last position, a witness, and German records of the event promised strong leads, but nothing panned out. Decades went by before the Americans teamed up with a German researcher who ferreted out more witnesses who saw Shank’s last moments.

The Virginia native had crashed to the north on a farm, and excavations soon recovered bits of plane and human bone. A DNA test in 2018 confirmed that the remains belonged to Shank.

9. The Pacific Pilot

Pacific pilot wreckage excavation - top 10 MIA

In 2018, the US armed forces trawled a patch in the Pacific Ocean looking for MIAs. Near the island of Ngerekebesang in the Republic of Palau, they discovered a pilot on the bottom of the sea. His remains were still inside his World War II plane that had been shot down about 74 years earlier.

At the time, the US airman’s identity could not be determined, but a huge effort went into returning the wreck to the surface. Decades of sand and ocean life had settled over everything and took two months of 12‑hour shifts to clear.

Operations were directed from a ship that moored above the sunken plane. Divers collected sediment in large buckets that took up to six hours to fill. Then a crane hauled the containers aboard the ship where archaeologists meticulously inspected the sand for artifacts.

Apart from the armed forces, civilians also worked on the ship to help with the recovery process. The next step will be to identify the unfortunate Pacific pilot and track down his next of kin.

8. Italian Dogfight Loser

Italian dogfight pilot Bortolani crash site - top 10 MIA

Both world wars saw plenty of close aerial battles, or dogfights, between enemy planes. These deadly encounters claimed many lives, and in 2014, one such pilot was found in a cornfield.

During World II, the Italians fought against the Allies, and Lieutenant Guerrino Bortolani got scratchy with US pilots on March 11, 1944. A witness saw his aircraft crash in the countryside in northern Italy.

Exactly 70 years later, the witness led investigators to the site, which was now farmland. At a depth of 4 meters (13 ft), they unearthed a Macchi C.205 Veltro, considered to be the best Italian battle plane of World II.

The soil produced engine pieces, wheels, fuselage, and equipment. The best discovery was the body of the pilot still sitting in the cockpit. Lieutenant Bortolani, then 27, was one of three Italians and three Germans who came in a fatal second when the Allies showed up for a bombing raid. Thus far, only one more Italian remains unaccounted for.

7. The Bauder Family

James Bauder femur discovery - top 10 MIA

One night in 1966, James Bauder took off from the deck of the USS Coral Sea off North Vietnam. His squadron departed for a bombing run, but two planes never returned. The 35‑year‑old lieutenant commander was one of them. Those flying alongside Bauder never saw him crash. There was no distress call or any debris. The father of three had simply vanished.

His parents and wife died before his remains were found in 2017. At the time Bauder was lost, his daughter, Jane, was four years old. When she received the long‑awaited news, she was 55 and her father had been found in the form of a femur. The fragment turned up in the area where he was last seen.

Before the leg bone was located, there had been many false hopes as the navy informed her whenever possible remains were discovered. But this time, DNA proved that it was Bauder. Wanting to pass on the good news, Jane called her aunt, who had provided the genetic sample years ago.

Sadly, like most of Bauder’s family, his younger sister would never know that he had been found. She had died days before Jane was informed about her father.

6. Australian In A French Field

Australian pilot William Smith field find - top 10 MIA

During World II, Sergeant William Smith served in a Royal Australian Air Force squadron in Redhill. In May 1942, the Australian climbed into his Spitfire and escorted RAF bombers to France.

The official story ran that the 24‑year‑old encountered an enemy pilot and was subsequently gunned down over the channel off Dover. When a search yielded no wreckage, it was assumed that the plane had sunk beneath the sea.

In 2011, a historian was nowhere near the spot where Smith officially disappeared. Andy Saunders was browsing in a French field looking for another Spitfire from the war. He soon found a crash site and the right kind of plane. But the moment a body surfaced, Saunders knew that it was not the aircraft he was looking for. (The other Spitfire’s pilot had bailed out and survived.)

Dog tags proved that it was indeed Sergeant William Smith. Considering that he had disappeared midway across the channel, the field find was a complete surprise. His exact position was almost 64 kilometers (40 mi) off course. In 2012, Smith was buried with military honors in France, a ceremony that was attended by his 84‑year‑old brother, Bert.

5. The Untouched Kittyhawk

Untouched Kittyhawk desert wreck - top 10 MIA

Jakub Perka was exploring Egypt’s Western Desert for an oil company when he stumbled onto something unexpected. A pristine World War II fighter plane sat in the middle of nowhere.

The single‑seater was a Kittyhawk P‑40 from the Royal Air Force. Unfortunately, the pilot was not so perfectly preserved—he was missing. There were threadbare clues to his last moments, and they led to a dreadful fate.

Believed to be Flight Sergeant Dennis Copping, the British pilot survived the crash and made a rough shelter using the wreckage and his parachute. The batteries and radio were outside, showing that he had tried to fix them and reestablish contact. But he had failed. As no human remains or uniform was recovered, it is believed that Copping had made a desperate and fatal decision—to walk out of the desert.

In 1942, the 24‑year‑old had been tasked with flying a Kittyhawk to another air base in the region for repairs. The plane had several problems beforehand. The front landing gear refused to retract, and flak damaged the fuselage. Copping never arrived, and the plane found in 2012 showed the same issues.

4. Dad Returned To Daughter He Never Really Knew

Robert Mains remains return ceremony - top 10 MIA

More than 70 years ago, Lieutenant Robert Mains held his daughter who had just been born. Hours later, he was deployed and would never see her again. While flying a bombing mission over Germany, Mains was shot out of the sky. Tragically, this happened just a few weeks before World II was about to end in 1945.

The Pentagon called his daughter, Barbara O’Brien, in 2017 to let her know that her father had been found. When human bones were recovered from a field in Germany, they were sent to the division that handles MIA cases. Once there, tests matched the remains to Barbara’s DNA.

The remains of Lieutenant Robert Mains were released and flown to Long Island. There, he was met at MacArthur Airport with a full military honor guard. His daughter, now in her seventies, attended the emotional ceremony with her husband, a Vietnam veteran. Mains was subsequently interred at the Calverton National Cemetery with full military honors.

3. The First Tuskegee Airman

The first black US military pilots were the Tuskegee Airmen. They faithfully served in World II despite discrimination that included one dangerous rule—black pilots had to fly 70 missions before they qualified for recuperative leave. White pilots had to complete 50.

One Tuskegee Airman was Captain Lawrence Dickson, 24. The married father was decorated with a Distinguished Flying Cross and a Purple Heart. On December 23, 1944, Dickson took off on his 68th mission, just two flights short of qualifying for leave. On the same day, his P‑51 plane disappeared over Italy.

His family was informed that he was missing, but no further news came until a crash site was located in 2017. It was in Austria near Hohenthurn, not far from Dickson’s last‑known location. Debris in the field resembled that of a P‑51, and German records confirmed that one had crashed there on December 23, 1944.

The rubble contained human remains. If analysis can link the remains to Dickson, which is highly likely, then he will be the first Tuskegee Airman MIA to be recovered. Another 26 remain missing.

2. Pilot Found By Grandson

Loren Hintz dog tags and remains - top 10 MIA

In 1945, the US Army Air Corps was determined to expel the Nazis from Italy. Lieutenant Loren Hintz was one of the pilots who fought on April 21 and liberated Bagnarola. When the dust settled, Hintz was nowhere to be found. Nobody knew it, but a 12‑year‑old Italian boy had seen his P‑47 go down.

Hintz left behind a nine‑month‑old daughter who grew up and had a son called Hans Wronka. Touched by his family’s memories of the missing man, Hans set out to find the grandfather he had never known. He hung out with veterans online, dug in archives, and traveled to Italy.

On his second visit to Italy, a remarkable thing happened. In 2016, Hans met the 12‑year‑old witness, now an old man, who led Hans straight to the site where the P‑47 crashed over 70 years earlier.

An archaeological team assisted and hit the first metal fragments 5 meters (16 ft) down. Then, the plane’s machine guns, frame, and engine were unearthed. Finally, as Hans watched, dog tags were lifted away from human bones. The name embossed on each was “Lt. Loren Hintz.”

1. The Danbury MIAs

Daniel Thomas teeth burial - top 10 MIA

Several decades ago, three boys lived in Danbury, Nebraska. The families of Daniel Thomas, Larry Knight, and Donovan Walters knew each other, and the boys went to the same grade school. Daniel’s mom and Larry’s dad were cousins. Remarkably, each grew up to become a fighter pilot—and all three went missing during the Vietnam War.

Since Danbury was very small, the tragedy echoed acutely throughout the community. Donovan Walters was found dead in 1988, 16 years after going missing. He was returned home for burial.

Daniel Thomas, 24, disappeared in 1971 while flying a secret mission over Laos. His last radio message mentioned that bad weather was interfering with visibility, and then a ground unit reported what sounded like an airplane crash. All attempts to locate the wreckage failed.

The first solid clue came in 2014 when a Vietnamese citizen showed investigators a photograph of dog tags. They belonged to Major Donald Carr, who had flown with Thomas that day. This eventually led to the crash site in Vietnam, far away from Laos. What little remained of Thomas (his teeth) was buried in Danbury in 2017.

Larry Knight remains missing.

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Ten Best Pilots: Legendary Space Aces Across Sci‑fi https://listorati.com/ten-best-pilots-legendary-space-aces/ https://listorati.com/ten-best-pilots-legendary-space-aces/#respond Sat, 07 Jun 2025 17:55:18 +0000 https://listorati.com/the-ten-best-pilots-in-science-fiction-history/

Science fiction is one of the world’s most beloved entertainment mediums, and when you think about the ten best pilots soaring through the cosmos, you instantly picture daring helmsmen, rogue smugglers, and fearless rebels. Spaceships need skilled hands at the controls, and these legendary aviators have become the very heartbeat of every interstellar saga.

These asteroid‑avoiding wingmen and women traverse the stars in everything from single‑person starfighters to floating cities and everything in between. Some pilots possess an innate knack for maneuvering, others grew up in gritty spaceports, and a few earned their stripes after years of relentless training. Their jaw‑dropping maneuvers have earned them a place in sci‑fi lore, and we’ve gathered the ten best pilots who have left an indelible mark on the genre.

Ten Best Pilots in Sci‑Fi History

10 Hikaru Sulu: Star Trek

It’s no surprise to any devoted fan that a Starfleet helmsman would rank among the top‑tier aviators. Hikaru Sulu, an original member of the now‑iconic Star Trek franchise, served as a steady presence throughout the 1960s series. First assigned to the Enterprise in 2265, he quickly became the senior officer and regular helmsman by 2266, guiding the vessel through countless mysterious sectors of space.

Sulu’s piloting prowess became crucial during several high‑stakes encounters. He was at the wheel when the Enterprise faced a deadly cat‑and‑mouse game with Khan aboard the hijacked Reliant. Later, when the crew was forced to commandeer an unfamiliar Klingon ship to thwart the whale probe, Sulu expertly piloted the craft through a daring time‑jump maneuver around the sun, cementing his reputation as one of the most reliable space pilots in history.

9 Han Solo: Star Wars

Equally iconic, Star Wars’s Han Solo instantly conjures the image of a swaggering space ace. A natural‑born flyer, Solo first honed his skills speeding through the mean streets of Corellia, where he learned to push any vehicle to its limits. He later spent a stint in the lower echelons of the Imperial Navy, sharpening his reflexes under fire.

Transitioning to a smuggler, Solo piloted the Millennium Falcon through the infamous Kessel Run in under 12 parsecs—a feat that remains unmatched. Alongside his loyal co‑pilot Chewbacca, he famously evaded an entire Imperial Fleet led by Darth Vader by threading the Falcon through a treacherous asteroid belt, cementing his legend across a galaxy far, far away.

8 Steven Hiller: Independence Day

Independence Day introduced audiences to the daring Captain Steven Hiller, a Top‑Gun‑level fighter ace who weaved his jet through the twisting canyons of the Grand Canyon with astonishing precision. Hiller’s quick thinking and instinctive tactics shone when he deployed his aircraft’s parachute to blind a pursuer, forcing the enemy craft to crash‑land.

His legend only grew when he became the first human to commandeer an alien vessel. With only a brief visual briefing and a single false start, Hiller successfully piloted the alien ship into space, infiltrated the massive Mothership, and escaped its labyrinthine interior within a tense 30‑second window, proving his aerial mastery on a planetary‑wide scale.

7 Rocket (Racoon): Guardians of the Galaxy

Long before the Guardians of the Galaxy burst onto the big screen, Rocket the raccoon was already a celebrated comic‑book ace. While the movies often showcase a comedic rivalry between Rocket and Star‑Lord for control of their ship, the comics make it clear: Rocket is the superior pilot. Genetically engineered by the High Evolutionary, Rocket’s very DNA includes advanced piloting protocols.

His engineered skill set gives him an edge over even the most seasoned human pilots. In the cinematic sequel, Rocket proudly declares his genetic superiority, and the High Evolutionary’s modifications ensure he can out‑maneuver Star‑Lord at every turn, earning him the unofficial title of the best pilot in the entire Marvel Universe.

6 Tom Paris: Star Trek (Voyager)

Often overlooked, Tom Paris proved himself as perhaps the most underrated pilot in sci‑fi history. As the chief flight controller of the Intrepid‑class USS Voyager, he guided the ship 70,000 light‑years from the Delta Quadrant back toward the Alpha Quadrant, navigating countless perilous scenarios.

Paris led the elite Delta Force Task Force, built a trans‑warp engine, and even piloted the vessel through temporal distortions. Despite an early career setback that landed him in a penal colony, he became the first human to safely reach warp ten, crossing the trans‑warp threshold. Though his triumphant flight triggered a mutation that threatened his oxygen processing, Paris’s indomitable spirit cemented his status as a true hotshot pilot.

5 Hoban “Wash” Washburne: Firefly

One of the greatest disappointments for sci‑fi fans was the abrupt cancellation of Firefly after a single season. Thankfully, the follow‑up film Serenity gave the crew—especially pilot Hoban “Wash” Washburne—a chance to shine. Wash’s calm demeanor and uncanny reflexes kept the Serenity out of countless tight spots.

He famously leveled the ship against a moving train during a training drill and executed the daring “Crazy Ivan” maneuver, reversing the Serenity’s engines to escape a pursuing Reaver vessel. His memorable line, “I’m a leaf on the wind… Watch how I soar,” delivered in the film’s most poignant moment, solidified Wash’s place among the most skilled sci‑fi pilots.

4 Hera Syndulla: Star Wars (Rebels/Ahsoka)

Although she first appeared in The Bad Batch, Hera Syndulla is best known as Spectre One, the leader of Ghost Team and Phoenix Squadron in Rebels and later in Ahsoka. Her piloting talent is nothing short of extraordinary, catching the eye of Grand Admiral Thrawn, one of the most formidable villains in the Star Wars universe.

Hera was selected to test‑pilot the B‑Wing fighter prototype, the blockade buster, and she remains the sole pilot to out‑fly Darth Vader in a one‑on‑one TIE Advanced duel. When Vader set a trap for the Spectres, Hera’s slick maneuvers caused his own fighter to become ensnared, showcasing her unrivaled aerial finesse.

3 Kara “Starbuck” Thrace: Battlestar Galactica

The 2004 reboot of Battlestar Galactica introduced a gender‑swapped Starbuck—Kara Thrace—whose call sign became synonymous with daring. She managed to prevent two of three nuclear missiles from striking Galactica during the fleet’s first Cylon sortie and executed a bold maneuver in the Battle of Ragnar Anchorage that saved fellow pilot Lee “Apollo” Adama.

Thrace later repaired a downed Cylon Raider on an inhabitable moon, returning it to Galactica and providing the fleet with crucial Cylon fighter technology. She also demonstrated the stealth capabilities of the new Blackbird fighter during its maiden flight, earning a promotion to Captain and CAG of the Pegasus.

In a dramatic twist, Thrace appears to sacrifice herself in her Viper, only to reappear months later, earning an almost mythic “angel” status among the colonists as the saga draws to its climactic conclusion.

2 Alex Rogan: The Last Starfighter

The Last Starfighter follows arcade‑obsessed teenager Alex Rogan, who shatters the top score on a mysterious cabinet‑style game in his trailer‑park home. Unbeknownst to him, the game is a covert recruitment tool for interstellar pilots, and an alien in a crisp suit promptly signs him up.

Initially overwhelmed, Alex soon realizes Earth and his hometown are under threat. He proves himself a natural Gunstar pilot, teaming with his co‑pilot to repel the entire Ko‑Dan Armada using a daring “Death‑Blossom” maneuver—a true Hail‑Mary of space combat—solidifying his place among the ten best pilots.

1 Leela: Futurama

Turanga Leela stands alone as the sole pilot of the Planetary Express delivery ship in Futurama. From the very first episode, she leaves her job as a Fate Assignment Officer to pursue her passion for flight, despite possessing only a single eye and the resulting depth‑perception challenges.

Leela’s no‑rain‑or‑sleet attitude and signature “Hi‑Ya!” kicks make her a formidable presence. She has piloted through asteroid belts, skirted black holes, and navigated countless lethal interstellar phenomena, proving herself not only the best pilot in the series but arguably the top ace across all of science fiction.

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