1946 Amsterdam KLM Douglas C-47 crash explained

1946 KLM Douglas C-47 Amsterdam accident
Occurrence Type:Accident
Summary:Controlled flight into terrain in poor weather
Site:Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, Netherlands
Aircraft Type:Douglas C-47A Skytrain
Operator:KLM
Tail Number:PH-TBW
Origin:London, United Kingdom
Destination:Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, Netherlands
Occupants:26
Passengers:21
Crew:5
Fatalities:26
Survivors:0

The 1946 KLM Douglas C-47 Amsterdam accident was the crash of a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines flight from London to Amsterdam on 14 November 1946. The accident occurred as the aircraft was attempting to land at Amsterdam's airport in poor weather. All 26 passengers and crew on board were killed.

Accident

The civil-use converted C-47 Skytrain was on a scheduled flight from London, England to Amsterdam in the Netherlands. The crew was cleared to land the aircraft at Schiphol Airport in poor weather. The first attempt to land failed and the crew had to perform a go-around. The second approach to land also failed. On the third approach to land the aircraft made a sudden turn to the left, apparently trying to line up with the runway. During this turn the aircraft struck the ground and crashed. The aircraft caught fire on impact, killing all 21 passengers and five crew on board. The victims included Dutch novelist Herman de Man.

At the time it happened, the accident was the worst aviation accident in the history of the Netherlands.[1] Eight days earlier another KLM DC-3 operating on the same route in the opposite direction, crashed on approach to London's Croydon Airport in poor weather. There were no fatalities in the London crash but the aircraft was written off.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19461114-0 Aircraft accident Douglas C-47A-90-DL PH-TBW Amsterdam-Schiphol Airport
  2. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19461106-0 Aircraft accident Douglas C-47A-90-DL PH-TBO near Shere, 6 November 1946