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Bonanza Air Lines Flight 114

Coordinates:35°56′26″N115°15′53″W / 35.9405°N 115.2647°W /35.9405; -115.2647
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
U.S. air crash

Bonanza Air Lines Flight 114
The accident aircraft in January 1959 with old registration
Accident
DateNovember 15, 1964
SummaryControlled flight into terrain
Site
Map
Aircraft
Aircraft typeFairchild F-27
OperatorBonanza Air Lines
RegistrationN745L (formerly N145L)
Flight originPhoenix Sky Harbor International Airport
DestinationMcCarran International Airport
Passengers26
Crew3
Fatalities29
Survivors0

Bonanza Air Lines Flight 114 was aFairchild F-27turbopropairliner flying out ofPhoenix, Arizona, toMcCarran International Airport inLas Vegas, Nevada, on the evening of November 15, 1964.[1]

At 8:25 p.m., during a landing approach in poor weather conditions, it crashed into the top of a hill in open desert country about 8 miles (13 km) SSW of Las Vegas. All 29 aboard—26 passengers and a crew of three—died instantly when the plane exploded on impact, no more than 10 feet (3 m) below a ridge crest.[2] Although this was not the only incident involving aBonanza Air Lines airplane, it is the only crash with fatalities during the airline's 23-year history.[3]

Media reports initially stated that 28 had died,[4] but these were corrected when the body of a very young girl was found amid the debris.[5] The rugged terrain and snowdrifts surrounding the crash site initially prevented ground vehicles from reaching the wreckage, so four helicopters assisted in the recovery efforts.[5] Eventually a narrow, unimproved road one mile long that climbs up a ridge and terminates at the hilltop crash site was built to assist in salvage operations; it can still be seen in current aerial photos.[6]

Pilot Henry "Hank" Fitzpatrick, a veteran with over 11,000 hours experience, was initially blamed for flying too low due to misreading the approach chart for McCarran International, but an investigation years later showed that the chart was marked in a non-standard, and possibly confusing, manner.[2][7] Some heirs of the crash victims sued the publisher of the chart, but before a verdict was reached in the wrongful death lawsuit the chart company,Jeppesen, agreed to pay the plaintiffs US$490,000.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Incident summary at baa-acro.comArchived June 29, 2021, at theWayback Machine
  2. ^abBates, Warren (November 15, 1999)."Hunt for Lost F-27".reviewjournal.com. Las Vegas Review-Journal. Archived fromthe original on May 8, 2003. RetrievedOctober 31, 2009.
  3. ^Bonanza Air Lines accidents and incidents at theAviation Safety Network
  4. ^"Plane Crash Takes Lives Of 28 People".The Free-Lance Star. Associated Press. November 16, 1964. p. 1. RetrievedOctober 31, 2009.
  5. ^ab"Bodies Recovered At Air Crash Site".The Victoria Advocate. Associated Press. November 17, 1964. p. 1. RetrievedOctober 31, 2009.
  6. ^"ACME Mapper aerial view of crash site". Mapper.acme.com. RetrievedJuly 1, 2013.
  7. ^"Aetna v. Jeppesen lawsuit, appeal ruling".openjurist.org.F2d (642): 339. April 20, 1981. RetrievedOctober 31, 2009.
  8. ^Accident description at theAviation Safety Network

External links

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1960
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1969
This list is incomplete.
An asterisk (*) denotes an incident that took place in a U.S. territory.
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