Hap Harper
Inducted into the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame, 2008
Howard "Hap" Harper, the world's first airborne traffic reporter, and a popular
personality on KSFO, KNBR and KYA, passed away on October 4, 2006, at the age of
81.
Hap's personal website is being maintained as a lasting tribute to his legacy at
www.HapHarper.com
Radio's Hap Harper
The First Air Traffic Reporter
Steve Rubenstein, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, October 7, 2006
Hap Harper, said to be the world's first airborne traffic
reporter and a jovial, joke-telling presence on Bay Area radio stations for more
than three decades, has died.
Mr. Harper, 81, died Wednesday, Oct. 4, of heart failure in a
hospital in Jackson (Amador County).
"Happiness is just a thing called Harper,'' was the advertising
jingle at radio station KSFO, where he was a regular on the morning show with
the late, legendary disc jockey Don Sherwood.
He loved to tell jokes, particularly bad jokes, to lighten the
bad news about traffic tie-ups. At times, his booming laugh seemed louder than
the sound of his single-engine traffic spotter.
Mr. Harper was perhaps best known for being the "bombardier"
with Sherwood in their tongue-in-cheek
aerial assault on the city of Stockton in
1958.
The campaign, a thinly disguised prank to boost ratings, involved Sherwood
and Mr. Harper dressing up in 19th century military uniforms and dropping
leaflets on downtown Stockton from the window of Mr. Harper's traffic plane.
"Consider yourself bombed, Stockton! Surrender or else!'' the
leaflets said.
A native of New Orleans, Mr. Harper moved with his family as a
child to Flint, Mich., where he fell in love with airplanes on a kiddie ride at
a local amusement park.
While a teenager, he enrolled in a flight school, obtained his
pilot's license and supported his studies at Oberlin College by giving flying
lessons.
He was a Marine Corps lieutenant during World War II before
moving to San Francisco in the 1950s.
His radio career began in 1957 as a series of fortunate
accidents. Sherwood, a fellow tenant in Mr. Harper's apartment building, took
flying lessons from him and then got the idea to have Harper go aloft and
provide live weather reports during Sherwood's show.
"Hap would say it was cloudy or foggy, but everyone already knew
what the weather was anyway,'' said his wife, Jan. "But then one day he looked
out the window and saw a traffic accident, and he warned people to avoid it, and
Sherwood said, 'That's it, that's your new career.' ''
Another radio partner,
Carter B. Smith, recalled Mr. Harper's
warmth as an announcer and his skill as a pilot.
"He was a remarkably cheerful, outgoing and positive man, an
excellent flier and fun to work with,'' Smith said.
And Smith said it was an honor whenever Mr. Harper decided to
fly low over Richardson Bay in the early morning hours and buzz his house.
For four decades, Mr. Harper supplemented his radio career by
selling real estate in the Sierra foothills, often flying prospective clients in
his plane to inspect property. He retired from radio in 1991.
A devoted horseman, Mr. Harper enjoyed frequent trail rides in
the Sierra with his wife.
He is survived by his wife, Jan, of Volcano (Amador County), son
Jeffrey Harper of Redwood City, and daughter Kellie Harper of Pottersville, Mo.
Read
about Sherwood and Harper's "Raid On Stockton"