On This Day in Aviation History

2014-12-16

Today in Aviation History: December 16th

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Written by: NYCAviation Staff
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2009 – Scotland’s largest airline, Flyglobespan, enters administration due to financial problems and ceases all flights.

1997 – Air Canada Flight 646, a CRJ-200 registered C-FSKI, crashes during a failed go-around in Fredericton, New Brunswick. In poor weather, a missed approach had been called in the final moments of approach. Seconds later, the aircraft would stall, and the right wing struck the ground, bending it four feet. The rest of the aircraft subsequently came down as well, separating the left winglet and breaking the radome and nose gear. The aircraft was then at full thrust, set by the go-around, and the plane went airborne again for about 1,000 ft, where they were finally caught by some friendly trees. All on-board miraculously survived.

1979 – A British Airways Concorde sets a new record for the London to New York crossing: 2 hours 59 minutes and 36 seconds.

1960 – United Airlines Flight 826 (a Douglas DC-8, reg N8031U) and Trans World Airlines Flight 266 (a Lockheed Super Constellation, reg N6907C) collided in midair over Staten Island in New York City, killing all 128 on both planes and six on the ground. The United aircraft, enroute to Idlewild Airport (now JFK) from Chicago O’Hare, was not only going extremely fast for its altitude, but was also 12 miles off-course due to a faulty VOR receiver. The TWA plane, enroute to LaGuardia Airport from Columbus, Ohio, was broadsided by the Super Connie at approximately 5,200 feet and plummeted nearly straight down onto Miller Field, killing all 44 on-board. The United aircraft continued on for a couple of miles before crashing in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

One passenger of the 84 on-board, an 11-year-old boy named Stephen Baltz, survived the initial impact but succumbed to his injuries the next morning. He said of the city’s snowfall out the window just before the crash, “It looked like a picture out of a fairy book. It was a beautiful sight.” This crash was the first time a black box was used for a crash investigation. Eerily, the doomed United DC-8 was named after Will Rogers, who himself had died in a plane crash in 1935.

The worst aviation disaster in history at the time, the crash overshadows what would have likely been the day’s top story: The arrest of an elderly man who was planning a suicide bombing of the President-Elect, John F. Kennedy. [PDF of The New York Times front page the following day.]

1951 – The first turbine-powered helicopter, the Kaman K-225, makes its maiden flight.



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