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It is customary for many airlines to retire a flight number if the flight is involved in a fatal incident, but United currently uses the flight 409 designation today on Los Angeles-Chicago-Buffalo route.<ref name="FlightAware flight monitoring data">{{cite web
It is customary for many airlines to retire a flight number if the flight is involved in a fatal accident, but United currently uses the flight 409 designation today on Los Angeles-Chicago-Buffalo route.<ref name="FlightAware flight monitoring data">{{cite web
| url = http://flightaware.com/live/flight/UAL409
| url = http://flightaware.com/live/flight/UAL409
| title = FlightAware - United Airlines (UA) 409 Flight Tracker
| title = FlightAware - United Airlines (UA) 409 Flight Tracker

Revision as of 07:08, 11 January 2013

United Airlines Flight 409
Accident
DateOctober 6, 1955
SummaryControlled flight into terrain
SiteMedicine Bow Peak, Carbon County, near Centennial, Wyoming
41°20′42″N 106°19′45″W / 41.34504°N 106.32906°W / 41.34504; -106.32906
Aircraft typeDouglas DC-4
OperatorUnited Airlines
RegistrationN30062disaster[1]
Passengers63
Crew3
Fatalities66 (all)
Survivors0

United Airlines Flight 409 was a scheduled flight departing from Denver, Colorado to Salt Lake City, Utah on October 6, 1955. The aircraft registration number was N30062disaster[2], a Douglas DC-4 propliner. The aircraft crashed into Medicine Bow Peak, near Centennial, Wyoming, killing all 66 people on board (63 passengers, 3 crew members.) The victims included five female members of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir[3] and military personnel. At the time, this was the deadliest airline crash in U.S. commercial aviation history,[3][4] and it tied with the March 22 crash in Hawaii of a United States Navy Douglas R6D-1 Liftmaster military transport aircraft, which also took 66 lives,[5] as the deadliest aviation accident of 1955.

Timeline

Flight 409 left Denver, Colorado at 6:33 a.m. on October 6, 1955. This was 83 minutes after its scheduled departure time. The assigned path the airliner was expected to fly was along airways V-4 Denver to Laramie, Wyoming V-118 to Rock River, Wyoming radio, V-6 to Fort Bridger, Wyoming, and V-32 to a landing in Salt Lake City. The flight was operating under Visual Flight Rules and was assigned a cruising altitude of 10,000 feet. Because the aircraft was not pressurized, the altitude was chosen to keep the passengers and crew from experiencing the discomfort that flying higher could cause. The route assigned to the airliner was specifically designed to allow safe passage at 10,000 feet over the continental divide in the Rocky Mountains.[6]

An expected position report from the United crew, scheduled for 8:11 a.m. while over Rock Springs, was not received, and repeated attempts to make radio contact with flight 409 were met with no response. With the airliner's status unknown, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was alerted to the missing aircraft. No radar was in place for civil aviation in this region in 1955. With no radar traces, manual searches were required to find the aircraft.

Search effort

The Wyoming Air National Guard launched two search aircraft: a two-seat T-33 Shooting Star piloted by Mel Conine and a single seat F-80 Shooting Star piloted by Ed Weed. Working on the assumption that the United plane may have taken an unauthorized short cut to make up for the 83-minute delay out of Denver, the two search planes pointed their aircraft toward the highest mountains in the region, Elk Mountain and Medicine Bow Peak. After a search of Elk Mountain failed to find the missing DC-4, Conine and his observer spotted at 11:40 a.m. a black stain and wreckage just southwest of the highest portion of Medicine Bow Peak. Turbulence kept them too far away to locate any possible survivors and they left the site to return to their base in Cheyenne.[7]

The New York Times (Oct. 7, 1955) reported:

"First rescuers to reach the scene said they had found about 50 bodies strewn along a 300-foot course down the face of the mountain. Only a tail piece, part of the fuselage and a wing of the plane had been located at mid-afternoon by rescuers who fought snowdrifts and a howling wind on the 12,005-foot Medicine Bow Peak. The mountain is about 40 miles west of here in the Snowy Range. The front part of the split plane was believed to have fallen down the other side of the peak. Another rescue group went up the north face of the mountain from Rawlins. The operation was suspended this evening because of a snowstorm and darkness.

The scene was marked by two huge patches of oil where the plane's engines apparently struck about 50-75 feet from the peak. The wreckage then slid down the steep incline in two ravines, much of it coming to rest 300 feet down on a small glacier. I don't see how there would be a chance of anyone surviving, said Capt. Conine, Wyoming Air National Guard jet pilot, who was one of the first to spot the wreckage.

A C-47 was sent from Cheyenne, Wyo., to circle the peak, particularly the northwest side, to search for the front portion of the plane. The Civil Aeronautics Administration said planes were unable to fly near the mountain because of the weather conditions.

Recovery

Recovery of the widely-scattered remains of the victims was extremely challenging due to the difficult terrain at the crash site. At the base of the almost perpendicular cliff where the aircraft hit, movement was hindered by a wide talus of weathered, fragmented rock and large boulders, all piled loosely on a steep slope. Mountaineers doing the recovery work also had to be constantly wary of rock falls that might be triggered by the activities of those above them on the cliff face. Cold weather and occasional snow also played a role in impeding recovery efforts. The recovery of human remains was not completed until the evening of October 11, 1955, five full days after the accident.

Investigation

Due to safety concerns, the CAB accident investigation team —not trained in alpine mountaineering techniques— was unable to visit the cliff location where the DC-4 initially hit.[8] Study of the wreckage that could be retrieved for examination suggested a nose up attitude and an unusually low airspeed of the plane, implying that the plane was attempting a climb at the time of its crash. The reasons for this are not explicitly known, but several theories exist:

  • An altimeter indicating an inaccurate altitude, leading the pilot to believe he was higher than he actually was;
  • Mountain obscuration by clouds, preventing visual sighting of the mountain peak before it was too late to react to prevent the crash;
  • Turbulence, specifically downdrafts, around Medicine Bow peak, pushing Flight 409 into the mountain.

Possible incapacitation of crew by carbon monoxide emanating from a faulty cabin heater was speculated upon based on recovery crew observations that crew bodies appeared 'discolored.' This theory was never proven, and the CAB report specifically states that there was no evidence to support crew incapacitation.[6]

After the investigation of the accessible wreckage was completed, United Airlines requested that the remaining debris be destroyed by the military. Attempts were made to accomplish this, but despite the use of explosives, artillery fire and —according to most sources— napalm bombs dropped from aircraft, complete obliteration of the wreckage was not possible.[9] One source, a 2007 book about the Rocky Mountain Rescue Group, contradicts the assertion that military jets bombed the site with napalm; instead, the book states that the cliff face was mined with explosives that were detonated in the spring of 1956, and the event was tightly controlled and not publicized.[8] Regardless of the disposal method, small fragments of flight 409's airframe and parts of the engines still exist in the area surrounding the crash site.[10]

Legacy

Prior to the loss of United 409, the deadliest scheduled airline accident in U.S. history was the June 1950 disappearance of Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 2501 over Lake Michigan, when 58 died.[4] [note 1] The 66 lives lost on Medicine Bow Peak remained the highest death toll on a scheduled airline flight in the U.S. for less than a year. In June 1956 two airliners, a Super Constellation and a DC-7, collided over the Grand Canyon, killing 128 people. Flight 409's crash, and other crashes and mid-air collisions in the United States that occurred over the next several years, convinced the U.S. Congress to improve airline safety procedures, and to increase civil aviation radar coverage.[11]

It is customary for many airlines to retire a flight number if the flight is involved in a fatal accident, but United currently uses the flight 409 designation today on Los Angeles-Chicago-Buffalo route.[12]

In August 2001 a stone with a bronze memorial plaque was placed just west of the Medicine Bow Libby Flats lookout off of Wyoming Highway 130 (Snowy Range Road), in an area called the Miner's Cabin turnout. The location faces the mountain where the crash occurred.[9]

In the film Beetlejuice, when Adam (Alec Baldwin) and Barbra (Geena Davis) are in the office (representing the afterlife), a voice on the PA systems announces the arrival of Flight 409 ("Flight 409 is arriving at Gate 3"). [13]

See also

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Notes and references

Notes
  1. ^ Although Flight 409 was the deadliest scheduled airliner accident in U.S. history at the time, worldwide there were previous crashes with higher death tolls. Eighty died in the 1950 Llandow air disaster in Wales, United Kingdom, and the deadliest military aviation accident was the crash of a U.S. Air Force C-124 transport aircraft on June 18, 1953 in Japan, costing the lives of 129.[4]
References
  1. ^ "FAA Registry (N30062)". Federal Aviation Administration.
  2. ^ "FAA Registry (N30062)". Federal Aviation Administration.
  3. ^ a b "Disasters: Waiting Room". TIME. October 17, 1955.
  4. ^ a b c "Wyoming Crash Toll Leads List". The Spokesman-Review. Spokane, WA. AP. October 7, 1955. p. 1.
  5. ^ Aviation Safety Network Aircraft Accident Douglas R6D-1 (DC-6) 131612 Honolulu, HI
  6. ^ a b "CAB report for October 6, 1955 incident involving N30062, Docket No. SA-311, File No. 1-0130" (PDF). Civil Aeronautics Board. Adopted March 13, 1957. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) (a text version is also available)
    (if links above fail to load report, visit http://dotlibrary.specialcollection.net and select "Historical Aircraft Accident Reports (1934-1965)", then retry report links)
  7. ^ Duncan, Melvin (Mel) D. (Autumn 2003). "Flight 409: Tragedy on Medicine Bow Peak" (PDF). Annals of Wyoming, The Wyoming History Journal. 75 (4): 3–10. ISSN 1086-7368. - extensive coverage and photographs
  8. ^ a b Scott-Nash, Mark (March 30, 2007). Playing for Real: Stories from Rocky Mountain Rescue (Google Books preview). Mountaineers Books. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-9760525-6-2.
  9. ^ a b "Medicine Bow Peak DC-4". coloradowreckchasing.com.
  10. ^ Cass, Alan. "Accident summary sheet for Medicine Bow Peak DC-4". coloradowreckchasing.com. - extensive coverage from multiple sources
  11. ^ Smith, Christopher (August 23, 2001). "Remembering the Disaster". The Salt Lake Tribune.
  12. ^ "FlightAware - United Airlines (UA) 409 Flight Tracker". flightaware.com.
  13. ^ [1]