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Frank Main
Chicago Sun Times

It was a bone-chilling day on Jan. 30, 1980, when a plane carrying Kellogg Co. executives flew off the runway at Meigs Field and crashed into Lake Michigan.

John Kerechek, a longtime pilot of the Chicago Fire Department's helicopter, jumped into action. He hovered over the tail of the partially sunken plane as his partner, Charles Tannehill, tossed a life raft to several survivors.

Then Tannehill plunged into the frigid water to save another passenger.

"John had to land on the water to get me," Tannehill said. "He saved me, too."

Mr. Kerechek, one of the most highly decorated members of the Chicago Fire Department, died Dec. 24 at his winter home in Mesa, Ariz. He was 83.

In the late 1960s, Mr. Kerechek won two Lambert Tree awards -- the highest honor bestowed on a firefighter by the city -- for other daring helicopter rescues of plane crash victims in Lake Michigan.

Mr. Kerechek, who had a second home in northwest suburban Huntley, held the rank of battalion chief when he retired in the late 1980s.

Tannehill's brother George Tannehill was commander of the helicopter unit and Mr. Kerechek was No. 2.

George Tannehill recalled forming the unit with Mr. Kerechek in 1965. "We started out of Midway, then moved to Meigs Field," he said.

Mr. Kerechek could fly everything from fixed-wing aircraft to helicopters, Charles Tannehill said.

"He's probably one of the most highly decorated firefighters in the city's history," Charles Tannehill said. "But he never bragged about anything."

In addition to instructing Fire Department pilots, Mr. Kerechek trained many of the pilots in the Chicago Police Department's helicopter unit, too, Charles Tannehill said.

A daughter, Leslie Koch-Sobczak of Plainfield, said her son Jeremy Koch followed Mr. Kerechek's footsteps into the Chicago Fire Department.

"Dad was his role model," she said. "Jeremy jumps from the helicopter into the water. He is a scuba diver for the Air Sea Rescue unit."

She recalls her father getting his photo taken with the late Mayor Richard J. Daley when Mr. Kerechek won one of his awards.

"I knew he was a hero," she said. "I was proud of him. But he always said he was just a man doing his job."

In retirement, Mr. Kerechek enjoyed golfing and bowling.

Mr. Kerechek also is survived by his wife, Elaine; two sons, John Kerechek of Cincinnati and Kenneth Kerechek of Tucson, Ariz.; and another daughter, Doreen Adams of Geneva.

Funeral arrangements are pending.

Copyright 2009 Chicago Sun-Times, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
December 28, 2009

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Wow this makes me feel old. I remember the Kelloggs crash, we used to use that accident as a setup for our airfield that had a runoff into the lake.

FF Kerechek was an amazing pilot and is a great example for us to this day. May he rest in peace...
Mr. Kerechek won two Lambert Tree awards -- the highest honor bestowed on a firefighter by the city -- for
She recalls her father getting his photo taken with the late Mayor Richard J. Daley when Mr. Kerechek won one of his awards.


What is so hard for the media to realize that such awards are RECEIVED and not won? This is not a competition, this is not a sport, these are not trophies.
Instead these awards are recognition for a job well done, they are received, not won. It means that in order to receive an award that one is risking themselves to get the job done, it means encountering a scene that many don't want to go to.
While such events are a part of the job, we train to mitigate such an event, not to win awards, this is "preparation meeting opportunity".

I'm glad the city is remembering one of their own here.
GODSPEED my brother you will be missed.

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