The U.S. Navy balloon A-5598 was an American navalfree balloon which went off-course and its crew of three were recorded missing for several weeks.[1][2]
The balloon was manned by three aeronauts, U.S. Navy Lieutenants Louis A. Kloor, Jr. (mission commander); Stephen A. Farrell (pilot);[5][6][7]
and Walter Hinton (ground observer).[8]
After a flight of over 25 hours the group,[9] which had narrowly avoiding coming down in the James Bay, was stranded in the wilderness and wandered for four days before they came upon a Cree Indian fur trader. He initially mistook the Americans for Canadian revenue agents but then guided them to safety.[10]
The trio recovered at Moose Factory, and later were brought to the nearest town on a railway line, Mattice (Ontario) on January 11.[11] They returned to a heroes' welcome in New York City on January 14, 1921.[12]
An inquiry by the Navy[13] found that the flight was legitimate and there was no misconduct by the airmen.[5] Hinton and Kloor had written letters home which their families sold to newspapers describing the flight, which prompted the Navy to start enforcing rarely used censorship rules.[14]