By Karen Angel
Karen Angel is the niece of Jimmie Angel
and President of the Jimmie Angel Historical Project (JAHP).
The JAHP's mission is to provide accurate information about
Jimmie Angel. She is working on three books about her uncle: a
photo biography for the JAHP; for herself an historical novel
and an autobiographical account of her search for the truth
about Jimmie Angel.
Surely Angel Falls in Venezuela's vast Canaima National
Park was known to the indigenous Pemon people of the
southeastern Gran Sabana region for thousands of years. But
due to its location on the House of the Devil, perhaps even
the Pemons avoided the mysterious Devil's Canyon within the
table mountain's interior where Angel Falls, the world's
highest waterfall, cascades 3,212 feet.
Born
in Missouri near St. Louis in 1899, Angel was obsessed with
Auyan-tepui; a 435 square mile heart shaped table mountain in
the southeastern Gran Sabana region of Venezuela. Auyan
means devil and tepui means house in the Pemon
language, hence the Devil's House. Angel believed that it was
the home of a lost river of gold that he claimed to have been
taken to years before by a mining geologist named McCracken.
Angel was working as an aviator guide in the Gran Sabana
for the Santa Ana Mining Company of Tulsa, Oklahoma in the
fall of 1933 with mining official D. H. Curry and Mexican
co-pilot and mechanic Jose Cardona. While on a solo flight
November 14, 1933, Angel flew into Devil's Canyon and saw for
first time what was to become known to the world as Angel
Falls. Due to ceaseless heavy rains, Curry and Cardona quit
the area without seeing what Angel referred to as his "mile
high waterfall."
The name Angel Falls came about during a Caracas reunion in
1937 of Angel and his friends American petroleum geologist I.
F. "Shorty" Martin and Venezuelan civil engineer and expert
outdoorsman and mountaineer Gustavo (Cabuya: "String") Heny.
They were talking about the waterfall and when they didn't
have a name for it, Heny suggested the name Angel Falls; using
Jimmie's last name because it was he who had made it known to
the world.
Jimmie Angel and Angel Falls became better known to the
world as the result of his October 9, 1937 landing of El
Rio Caroni, his Flamingo airplane, on Auyan-tepui in
search of McCracken's lost river of gold.
Jimmie's expeditions
companions were his wife Marie, Gustavo Heny, Heny's gardener
and jungle companion Miguel Angel Delgado, and Spanish
botanist Captain Felix Cardona Puig.
Angel had scouted a landing spot on Auyan-tepui from the
air. Heny and Cardona, who was born in Barcelona, Spain, had
explored for a foot route from their camp at Guayaraca on
Auyan-tepui's south flank, to the proposed landing site which
was on the northern side of the plateau. Their search was only
partially successful. A disgruntled Cardona returned to camp
after a few days while Heny continued to pursue a northern
route. He was able to establish a route across much of the
plateau, but was turned back from reaching the planned landing
site because of the tepui's great interior wall. During his
fifteen days of reconnaissance, Angel dropped supplies
attached to parachutes that had been fashioned by Heny's
sister Carmen.
On the morning of the
flight, Cardona stayed in camp to maintain radio contact with
the landing party that included Jimmie and Marie, Heny, and
Delgado who was known for his ability with rope and machete.
Marie Angel wrote in her unpublished manuscript that they were
well prepared for possible problems; supplies included tents,
blankets, flashlights, cameras, rope, machetes, and enough
food to last a month.
At first, Angel's Auyan-tepui landing appeared to be
perfect, but the wheels broke through the sod and sank into
the mud bringing the airplane to an abrupt halt with a broken
fuel line and the airplane's nose buried in the mud.
Angel had expected pilots to come to their assistance, but
the search was delayed due to loss of radio contact with
Cardona. After a few days, the Angel party was presumed
hopelessly lost … or dead.
On October 11th, when it
became clear that there was no gold to be found and that El
Rio Caroni was hopelessly mired in her muddy landing spot
the landing party started the long march from the mountain to
the village of Kamarata in the valley below.
As planned should the aerial part of the expedition for
gold encounter trouble, the capable Heny led the Angels and
Delgado down from Auyan-tepui to their camp at Guayaraca and
on to Kamarata in an arduous march for survival that took
eleven days. According to Heny's sister Carmen, "Jimmie was a
great pilot, but he wasn't very good on the ground. He didn't
like to walk."
Twelve years later, American photo journalist Ruth
Robertson led the first successful expedition to the base of
Angel Falls which measured and made it officially the world's
highest waterfall. Her article, "Jungle Journey to the World's
Highest Waterfall," published in the November 1949 edition of
National Geographic is a splendid account of an extraordinary
journey.
Jimmie Angel's airplane El Rio Caroni remained on
Auyan-tepui for 33 years. Its future was changed in 1964 when
the government of Venezuela declared it a national monument.
In 1970, it was removed in sections by Venezuelan Air Force
helicopters and taken to the Aviation Museum in Maracay for
restoration. It was later moved to the airport at Ciudad
Bolivar where it remains displayed on the green in front of
the passenger terminal.
The federal government
represented by the Venezuelan Air Force would like to return
El Rio Caroni to the Museum of Aviation in Maracay so
that it can be properly conserved under controlled museum
conditions. In exchange, the Air Force would give Ciudad
Bolivar a life-sized model that is under construction at the
museum. Although the airplane has suffered serious damage
several times from automobiles and a falling tree, the State
of Bolivar refuses to return the airplane to Maracay.
Angel who died in Panama in 1956, never dreamed that his
airplane would become a national monument or that its care and
location would be contentious issue. Many years before, when
asked by his friend American pilot Patricia Grant if he wanted
his plane taken off Auyan-tepui Jimmie replied, "No, as long
as it stays up there, it will be a memory of me."
All photos displayed with the permission of Karen
Angel, © JAHP Archive Copyright © 2002. All rights reserved.
Except by Karen Angel, no part of this article may be
reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or stored in
a retrieval system, without the prior consent in writing.
Karen Angel, Post Office Box 4914, Arcata, California 95518,
United States of America.
Learn more about Angel-Eco Tours' customizable adventure travel packages for individuals, corporate groups and families by selecting the following links:
Angel Falls in Canaima National Park hiking adventure
Adventure river cruise on the Orinoco Delta
Andes Mountains & Los Llanos bird and wildlife watching adventure
A Caribbean marine and scuba diving adventure in Los Roques National Park
The trips described on their individual pages can be combined to enhance your Venezuelan experience. For example, you might consider combining the Angel Falls and Orinoco Delta travel packages, or the Andes Mountains / Los Llanos and Los Roques trips. Angel-Eco Tours will work with you to arrange the best combination of trips to fulfill your adventure dreams.
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