On This Day in Aviation History

2011-11-01

On This Day in Aviation History: November 1st

2011 – LOT Polish Airlines Flight 16, a Boeing 767-300ER flying from Newark to Warsaw with 230 people on board makes a gear-up belly landing at Warsaw Chopin Airport. No one is injured. The malfunction is blamed on a hydraulic failure.

1993 – Space Shuttle Columbia lands at Edwards Air Force Base, completing mission STS-58, the fourth longest US mission ever. It would also be Columbia‘s final landing at Edwards.

1992 – Space Shuttle Columbia completes mission STS-52 after landing at Kennedy Space Center.

1989 – Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS) bans smoking on many flights.

1966 – NASA test pilot Bill Dana reaches an altitude of 58 miles (93 km) and a speed of 3,750 mph aboard an X-15.

1955 – A dynamite bomb explodes in the luggage hold of United Airlines Flight 629 while flying near Longmont, Colorado, killing all 39 passengers and five crew members. The Douglas DC-6B was enroute to Portland and Seattle from Denver, having originated at New York’s LaGuardia Airport with a stop at Chicago O’Hare. The culprit was not a terrorist, but a man named Jack Gilbert Graham who sought revenge against his mother Daisie King, a passenger on the flight, for treating him badly as a child. The bomb was disguised as a Christmas gift, which he had given her and she had packed in her suitcase. Having been only the second bombing of an airplane in the United States, there were no explicit laws against blowing up airliners. Despite the large body count, Colorado authorities were only able to charge Graham with a single count of premeditated murder for the killing of his mother. Graham was convicted and executed in a Colorado gas chamber 14 months after the bombing.

1939 – The first jet-powered plane, the Heinkel He 178, is demonstrated to officials of the Reich Air Ministry for their consideration as a warplane. The Nazi bigwigs pass on the design despite its superior speed, preferring to continue using proven piston-driven aircraft rather than investing in the new jet technology.

1926 – The Air Commerce Act is passed into law. Created at the urging of aviation industry leaders and President Calvin Coolidge, the act mandates for the first time such fundamentals as pilot licenses, aircraft airworthiness certificates, airways and investigation of accidents.

1911 – Italian Army Lieutenant Giulio Gavotti drops four grenades from his Bleriot aircraft onto an Ottoman encampment in Libya, marking history’s first aerial bombing.



About the Author

admin





 
 

 

Today in Aviation History: January 6

Happy birthday to Lufthansa! United Grounds Ted, the US Marines take delivery of their first AV-8 Harrier and more...
by NYCAviation Staff

 
 
President Richard M. Nixon and Dr. James C. Fletcher, NASA Administrator, discuss the proposed Space Shuttle vehicle in San Clemente, California, on January 5, 1972. (Photo by NASA)

Today in Aviation History: January 5th

The Space Shuttle program is launched, Amelia Earhart is declared legally dead, Independence Air ceases operations, and more...
by NYCAviation Staff

 

 
The Apollo 17 spacecraft, containing astronauts Eugene A. Cernan, Ronald E. Evans, and Harrison H. Schmitt, glided to a safe splashdown at 2:25 p.m. EST on Dec. 19, 1972, 648 kilometers (350 nautical miles) southeast of American Samoa. The astronauts were flown by recovery helicopter to the U.S.S. Ticonderoga slightly less than an hour after the completion of NASA's sixth and last manned lunar landing in the Apollo program. (Photo by NASA)

Today in Aviation History: December 19th

The world's first airport opens near Paris, the last moon mission returns to earth, a Chalk's Ocean Airways crash is captured on video, and more...
by NYCAviation Staff

 
 

Today in Aviation History: December 16th

The midair collision of a United DC-8 and TWA Constellation over New York City, Concorde makes the first sub-3-hour Atlantic crossing, an Air Canada CRJ crashes, and more...
by NYCAviation Staff
726

 
 

Today in Aviation History: December 15th

In a near disaster, KLM Flight 867 loses all engines temporarily after flying through a cloud of volcanic ash, McDonnell Douglas and Boeing merge, the Boeing 787 makes its first flight, and more..
by NYCAviation Staff

 




  • Thanks for the nice blog. It was very useful for me. Keep sharing such ideas in the future as well. This was actually what I was looking for, and I am glad to came here! Thanks for sharing the such information with us

    ary ginanjar agustian