The Long Blue Line: Coast Guard Lighthouses and the history of the Flying Santa

By William H. Thiesen, Historian Coast Guard Atlantic Area Historian

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Throughout the history of the U.S. Coast Guard’s aviation branch, the service’s aircraft have come to the aid of the American public in emergencies and in time of need. However, the holiday season provides a unique opportunity for private citizens to show their appreciation.

Portrait photograph of William Wincapaw, originator of the Flying Santa program. Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.
Portrait photograph of William Wincapaw, originator of the Flying Santa program. Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.

Beginning in the Great Depression, aviator William “Bill” Wincapaw began the tradition of the Flying Santa. Born in Friendship, Maine, Wincapaw oversaw flight operations for the Curtiss Flying Service in Rockland, Maine. He came to admire Maine’s lighthouse keepers and their families for standing the watch in isolated and often inhospitable locations.

To show his appreciation for their dedication and self-sacrifice, Wincapaw decided to deliver gift parcels to local lighthouses on Christmas Day. Early in the morning on December 25, 1929, Wincapaw loaded the packages of Christmas gifts into his vintage Travel Air A-6000-A airplane, featuring a single radial engine and wicker seats. That first year he airdropped Christmas gifts to a dozen lighthouses located along the Maine Coast.

In 1946, the Flying Santa used a Sikorsky S-51 for deliveries. It was the first use of a helicopter for Christmas deliveries. Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.
In 1946, the Flying Santa used a Sikorsky S-51 for deliveries. It was the first use of a helicopter for Christmas deliveries. Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.

Wincapaw continued the tradition the next year and, over time, came to be known as “The Flying Santa” and the “Santa of the Lighthouses.” He began to dress the part and enlisted his son, Bill Jr., to pilot additional Christmas Day flights. His gift parcels included basic items, such as newspapers, magazines, coffee, tea, candy, tobacco, soup, yarn, pens and pencils.

By 1933, the program proved so popular that Wincapaw expanded it to include 91 lighthouses from Maine to Rhode Island and Connecticut. He even found commercial sponsors to underwrite the cost of the parcels and the flights.

In the late 1930s, the program expanded requiring the services of a third “Santa.” The Wincapaws enlisted New England maritime historian Edward Rowe Snow to fill the position. During World War II, deliveries became more sporadic; however, by war’s end the Flying Santa visited an impressive 115 lighthouses and Coast Guard stations.

In 1946, the program even tested the latest aviation technology using a helicopter to assist in airborne deliveries. The Flying Santa reverted back to fixed-wing aircraft the next year and helicopters would not be used again for more than 30 years.

The original Flying Santa, William Wincapaw, drops a Flying Santa parcel to a lighthouse at Christmas time in 1936 Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.
The original Flying Santa, William Wincapaw, drops a Flying Santa parcel to a lighthouse at Christmas time in 1936 Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.

In 1947, Wincapaw suffered a heart attack during a flight out of Rockland and died in the ensuing crash. Numerous lighthouse keepers, their families and representatives from the Coast Guard, Army and Navy attended Wincapaw’s memorial service. At the appointed time of the service, fog horns and lighthouse warning bells called out along the Maine Coast to honor the man who established the beloved Flying Santa tradition.

After Wincapaw’s passing, Snow took over the program. Snow and his family became the heart and soul of the operation. With the support of dedicated pilots, Snow honored Wincapaw by expanding the flights to include nearly 180 lighthouses and boat stations. In certain years, the program even served installations along the shores of the West Coast, Great Lakes and remote locations, such as Bermuda and Sable Island, 100 miles off the Nova Scotia coast.

Flying Santa delivering parcels by helicopter in 1946. U.S. Coast Guard photo.
Flying Santa delivering parcels by helicopter in 1946. U.S. Coast Guard photo.

Snow continued the Christmas tradition for 45 years. He retired in 1981, when failing health prevented him from taking part in further Flying Santa missions. That year, oversight of the Flying Santa program passed to the Hull Lifesaving Museum and helicopters replaced fixed-wing aircraft to transport the Flying Santa.

In 1987, lighthouses underwent automation; however, the Flying Santa continued to visit Coast Guard bases and installations.

In the 1990s, a number of retired Coast Guardsmen began volunteering to serve as the Flying Santa. In 1997, the all-volunteer Friends of Flying Santa was organized as a private non-profit to run the Flying Santa program.

The Flying Santa has been in operation nearly 90 years since Wincapaw founded it. Over the years, the Flying Santa has missed only the year 1942, due to the security concerns of World War II.

Today, the program delivers gifts to over 800 Coast Guard children at 75 units located from Maine to New York. The Flying Santa remains a part of Coast Guard tradition and long blue line legacy.

Flying Santa visiting Station Jonesport, Maine in 2015. Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.
Flying Santa visiting Station Jonesport, Maine in 2015. Photo courtesy of Friends of Flying Santa.

Image Gallery

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CGD 24 Wainwright Unknown port; photo taken from quarterdeck of unnamed USCG cutter. Boston? Photo...
USCG patrol boats during Prohibition
"Coast Guard Destroyer Downes (From a Painting by the Destroyer Force Bugle Staff Artist, Marius...
"Ensign Roland making end run, Coast Guard-Marine game, Washington, D.C., 1929." Scanned from...
"1929 - Coast Guard Football Team - 1929. Back Row: -Lieut. Baker, Coast and Manager; Wineke,...
A photo of Coast Guard Destroyer CONYNGHAM on patrol during Prohibition.
Coast Guard Destroyer's baseball team (no date).
Hand-written caption on reverse of photo reads: "Officers and crew of CGC Beale (Navy destroyer...
Hand-written caption on reverse of photo reads: "R R Waesche Sr., CGC Snohomish, Port Angeles, or...
"BEALE (CG-9) (Of the old U.S. Coast Guard Destroyer Force - 1924-1930) An early 20th century...
"Engineroom Force of the Coast Guard Cutter PONTCHARTRAIN. 3-5-29 (1)." CCG Scrapbook (CG...
Copy photo found in the CG Historian's Office Special Collections Archive in the "Uniforms" folder....

U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office
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Contacting us:  U.S.C.G. Historian's Office