Capital Airlines Flight 67

Coordinates: 43°31′14.05″N 84°5′54.91″W / 43.5205694°N 84.0985861°W / 43.5205694; -84.0985861
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Capital Airlines Flight 67
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Passengers44
Crew3
Fatalities47
Survivors0

Capital Airlines Flight 67 was a domestic scheduled U.S.

snowstorm on April 6, 1958, killing all 47 people on board. The flight was en route from Flint-Bishop Airport to the Freeland-Tri City Airport (now MBS International Airport) when it crashed.[2] Flight 67 was the first of four fatal crashes in the space of two years involving Capital Airlines Vickers Viscounts;[3] the others were Capital Airlines Flight 300 (May 1958),[4] Capital Airlines Flight 75 (May 1959), and Capital Airlines Flight 20
(January 1960).

Approach conditions towards Freeland were poor due to the weather; there was restricted visibility, and conditions were ripe for

stall, which was followed by a spin.[5]
The crew could not regain control, leading to the crash.

The official cause of the crash was listed as an undetected buildup of

horizontal stabilizer which, coupled with airspeed and the design of the aircraft, caused it to lose control.[5] Furthermore, the aircraft's stall warning device was inoperative.[2][6]

A memorial to the victims was unveiled in a local cemetery in 2001.[7]

References

  1. ^ Andrick, Floyd The crash of Flight 67 was 60 years ago, Midland Daily News, April 6, 2018, retrieved 2024-03-18
  2. ^ a b "Civil Aeronautics Board Accident Report, Docket no. SA-331, File no. 1-0031". 6 April 1958. Retrieved June 1, 2021.PDF
  3. ^ Capital Airlines accidents and incidents
  4. Aviation Safety Network
  5. ^
    Aviation Safety Network
  6. ^ Winger, Doug (March 24, 2008). "47 perish: Easter Sunday plane crash at Tri-City Airport remembered 50 years later". Midland Daily News. Archived from the original on January 30, 2013.
  7. ^ Henson, Stacey (April 6, 2008). "Crash of Capital Airlines Flight 67 lingers like contrails in the mind of an Essexville, Michigan, author and plane enthusiast". Saginaw news archives, mlive.com.

External links