Eastern Air Lines Flight 665 Explained

Occurrence Type:Accident
Eastern Air Lines Flight 665
Date:January 12, 1947
Type:Controlled flight into terrain
Site:Galax, Virginia, United States of America
Operator:Eastern Air Lines
Aircraft Type:Douglas C-49-DO
Tail Number:NC88872
Occupants:19
Passengers:16
Crew:3
Injuries:1
Fatalities:18
Survivors:1

Eastern Air Lines Flight 665 was a domestic airline flight, on January 12, 1947, using a Douglas C-49-DO, which deviated from its course during a rainstorm, struck high ground a few miles west of Galax, Virginia, and burned, killing all but one of the 19 aboard.

Origin

The flight, which originated at Akron–Canton Airport, Ohio, and was bound for Smith Reynolds Airport, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, with 16 passengers and three crew, was due to land at 0123 hrs EST. At 0114 hrs., the pilot radioed that he was little more than five miles southeast of the field and at 7,000 feet. That was the last contact with the flight. Winston-Salem is about 70 miles southeast of the crash scene.

Crash

The converted C-49 Skytrain, coming in from the east, struck trees behind the Providence Church in the Providence community in Grayson County, just west-northwest of Galax, Virginia, and cut a path about 500 yards long. "The wings were ripped off and the fuselage came to rest against a fill where a dirt road leads from highway No. 94 into the church. It was a scant five feet from the pavement on the North-South highway and about a 100 yards from the intersection with route 95."[1] The time of the crash was fixed at 0140 hrs. by a resident who checked a clock when she heard the impact. She immediately called the fire department. The plane impacted at an altitude of about 2,500 feet.

One passenger, a 25-year-old man from Boynton, Florida, was saved by two members of the Providence community who ripped his seat from the burning fuselage. The Galax fire department and rescue squad arrived in 20 minutes and extinguished the fire with chemicals and water. They pulled 18 badly charred bodies from the wreck in an hour and a half.[1]

Aircraft

The airliner had been ordered by Transcontinental & Western Air, Inc. as a DC-3-384, NC1949,[2] but was impressed by the U.S. Army Air Force before delivery as C-49-DO, 41-7689, c/n 3274,[3] [4] with first flight in 1941. It went to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation on November 29, 1945, was purchased by Eastern Airlines and registered NC88872.[5]

Cause

The Civil Aeronautics Board report on the accident stated that the cause was "The action of the pilot in attempting a let-down without having positively determined the position of the aircraft. A contributing factor was the erroneous navigation of the pilot which on at least two occasions led him to believe that he was farther south than he actually was"[6] [7]

References

36.661°N -80.988°W

Notes and References

  1. News: . Residents Near Scene Pull Passenger from Wreck; Craft Off Course . The Spokesman-Review . Spokane, Washington . January 13, 1947 . 1 .
  2. Web site: Douglas Production List Part 01. February 26, 2017. January 26, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180126070713/http://www.abcdlist.nl/douglas_longbeach_01.html. dead.
  3. Book: Andrade, John M. . U.S. Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909 . Midland Counties Publications . Leicester . 1979 . 0-904597-22-9 . 74 .
  4. Web site: Douglas DC-3 (C-47) production list . rzjets.net .
  5. Web site: 1941 USAAF Serial Numbers (41-6722 to 41-13296) .
  6. CAB File No. 1-0005-47
  7. Web site: ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-49-DO (DC-3) NC88872 Galax, VA . Harro . Ranter .