Wings of
Steel, Heart of Gold
John G. Roberts’ interest in flying began
as it might for most boys, by building hand-launched gliders and
rubber-band-powered airplanes that he flew in the streets outside his childhood
That idea was a seed that planted itself deep
in Roberts’ psyche, and began to sprout in ROTC at
Whether he chose his destiny, or maybe it was
somehow chosen for him, one thing is certain—John Roberts was meant to
fly for a lifetime. In December of 1953, Roberts entered the Army as a second
lieutenant in the Engineer Officer Basic Course at
Not quite a year after entering the Army,
Roberts already had logged an impressive number of flights in a variety of
aircraft, having graduated from the
It was the helicopter training that introduced
Roberts to the type of flying he likes to do best. “Helicopters are more
challenging to maneuver, more flexible in their capabilities, you’re
flying lower and you thus have a greater ability to observe and support the
mission requirements on the ground,” Roberts says. It is this passion for
freedom and open skies that carried him through five years in the Army, which
led into another 23 years in the Army National Guard during which he earned the
coveted Master Army Aviator badge, and as a Major commanded the 140th Aviation
Company.
Among the myriad of missions and aircraft too
numerous to count on a room full of fingers and toes, Roberts had the privilege
of being General Charles Ott’s preferred pilot, a distinguished Santa
Barbara man who at one time was in charge of the entire Army National Guard.
In 1969, Roberts eloped to Vegas with his
ladylove Susie, and while John continued his service in the Guard out of
“Years ago when a ranch manager was
trying to force me off the ranch, John and Susie stepped in and helped get me
through a really terrible time,”
It is that kind, reliable nature that no doubt
brought Roberts up through the ranks in his military career and helped make him,
since 1973, a distinguished member and former Captain of the local
Sheriff’s Aero Squadron. Flying search and rescue missions for the
Squadron has brought Roberts much recognition for his instinctive ability to
“just know” where downed aircraft and missing persons are located,
having located seven downed aircraft in his flying career.
“When the job seemed a lost cause they
called in John,” his wife, Susie, says. “He follows his heart and
it leads him right to the spot.”
When not on search and rescue, Roberts
performed prisoner transport, administrative flights for local County officials
and, most thrillingly, marijuana eradication and drug busts. Before the
Sheriff’s Department had its own helicopter, Roberts used his own
helicopter and airplanes to help the Department with drug raids. “One guy
I followed all the way from
Although Roberts no longer owns a helicopter he
still keeps an ample supply of aircraft on hand: a yellow and grey T-28A
Trojan, a red and white T-28B Trojan, an L-19 Cessna Birddog kept at San Lucas
Ranch and the Cessna 310 twin that he originally owned with Jack Crawford since
1968. This collection no doubt is a good indication that the word
“retirement” has no place in John Roberts’ vocabulary. His
membership in flying clubs such as the Quiet Birdmen, Aviation Country Club,
Santa Barbara Amateur radio Club and the Santa Barbara Control Modelers Club
(often spotted flying on the San Lucas Ranch airstrip) is another indication
that Roberts’ doesn’t plan to slow down.
With nearly 12,000 flying hours he still flies about once a
week for the Sheriff’s Aero Squadron, but assignment or no assignment,
flying is who Roberts is, it’s what he loves, and it’s what he was
born to do.