91.5 Chapel Hill 88.9 Manteo 90.9 Rocky Mount 91.1 Welcome 91.9 Fayetteville 90.5 Buxton 94.1 Lumberton 99.9 Southern Pines 89.9 Chadbourn

FT. BRAGG STORIES: 'The Fireball Went Over'

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

Courtesy Richard Clapp

"I was only in the military six months when the disaster happened," recalled Richard Clapp. He was 19 years old on March 23, 1994, fresh out of basic training and jump school. He'd been at Fort Bragg just three weeks. That afternoon he stood on Green Ramp waiting to make his first official jump with the 82nd Airborne.

He never got the chance. Instead, he lived through the Green Ramp disaster, one of the U.S. military's worst peacetime accidents.

A transport plane collided in mid-air with a fighter jet above Pope Air Force Base. The jet hit the runway and skidded into another plane, sending a giant fireball rolling over the 500 Fort Bragg paratroopers preparing for training jumps.  

Twenty-four soldiers died and more than 100 were injured.  

Clapp was burned on 45 percent of his body. He underwent more than a dozen surgeries and months of physical therapy before medically retiring from the Army a few years later.  

Today Clapp lives with his wife and two children in a small town near Greensboro. He often returns to Fort Bragg to observe the anniversary of the disaster, reconnect with other survivors, and mourn those who didn't make it.

Last year, fellow veterans offered Clapp the chance to make the jump he missed. He traveled to the National Parachute Test Center in Florida, where, after a brief refresher course, he went up in a World War II era plane to make a series of military-style slack line jumps.

"It was amazing to jump out of an aircraft that had actually dropped paratroopers in World War II," said Clapp. "I felt exhilaration again. I felt like redemption."

And the landing, he said, was perfect.  "Even though I hadn't done that in 20 years, it was still there."

Ft. Bragg Stories is a collaboration between the Fayetteville Observer and WUNC's American Homefront Project to commemorate a century of history at Fort Bragg through personal narratives. You can hear other stories in the serieshere. If you'd like to share your Fort Bragg story, you can send it here, or email fortbraggstories@wunc.org

An F-16 Fighting Falcon hit the tarmac in front of this C-141 Starlifter setting it on fire March 23, 1994. The crash spread wreckage and burning fuel into an area where paratroopers waited to board the aircraft.
Credit Department of Defense

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Related Stories
  1. FT. BRAGG STORIES: Helping Soldiers Find Their Voice
  2. FT. BRAGG STORIES: 'Finding Peace In The Present'
  3. FT. BRAGG STORIES: 'I Was Ready For A Challenge'
  4. Ft. Bragg Stories Now Available As Podcast
More Stories
  1. A ‘modern-like military barracks’ nonprofit in Granville County is seeking more veteran applicants
  2. A new program in Fayetteville gives soldiers leaving active duty a chance to pursue a future in farming
  3. Doctors turn to AI and wearable monitors to measure the effects of burn pits on veterans' health
  4. Highlighting the legacy of the U.S. Army’s first all-Black World War II paratrooper unit
  5. A Durham historical marker will honor a Black soldier killed after challenging Jim Crow laws