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Lynyrd Skynyrd plane crash

Coordinates: 31°04′19″N 90°35′57″W / 31.07194°N 90.59917°W / 31.07194; -90.59917
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Convair 240 N55VM crash
Accident
DateOctober 20, 1977, at 18:52 (CST).
SummaryEngine failure due to fuel exhaustion. Aircraft destroyed on impact during emergency landing attempt.
SiteHeavily-wooded swamp, Amite County, five miles northeast of Gillsburg, Mississippi
31°04′19″N 90°35′57″W / 31.07194°N 90.59917°W / 31.07194; -90.59917[1]
Aircraft
Aircraft typeConvair CV-240 (first flew in 1948)[2]
OperatorL & J Company of Addison, Texas
RegistrationN55VM
Flight originGreenville, South Carolina
StopoverMcComb-Pike County Airport, Pike County, Mississippi (emergency attempt)
DestinationBaton Rouge, Louisiana
Passengers24
Crew2
Fatalities6
Survivors20

On October 20, 1977, a Convair CV-240 chartered by the rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd from L&J Company of Addison, Texas, ran out of fuel and crashed in Gillsburg, Mississippi, near the end of its flight from Greenville, South Carolina, to Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist/vocalist Steve Gaines, backing vocalist Cassie Gaines (Steve's older sister), assistant road manager Dean Kilpatrick, pilot Walter McCreary and co-pilot William Gray all died as a result of the crash. Twenty others survived.

Crash

On October 20, 1977, just three days after the release of Street Survivors, Lynyrd Skynyrd's chartered Convair CV-240 ran out of fuel near the end of their flight from Greenville, South Carolina, where they had just performed at the Greenville Memorial Auditorium, and were en route to LSU in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.[3][4]

Though the pilots attempted an emergency landing on a small airstrip, the plane crashed in a forest near Gillsburg, Mississippi. Lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist/vocalist Steve Gaines, assistant road manager Dean Kilpatrick, pilot Walter McCreary, and co-pilot William Gray all died on impact and backing vocalist Cassie Gaines (Steve's older sister) bled to death at the site[5]. Medical personnel arrived quickly and began to ferry out the injured and the dead. Victims were taken to the hospital in nearby McComb and Jackson by ambulances and other vehicles. Guitarist Allen Collins suffered two cracked vertebrae in his neck, and both Collins and bassist Leon Wilkeson nearly had arms amputated as a result of crash injuries. Wilkeson suffered severe internal injuries, including a punctured lung, and had most of his teeth knocked out. Guitarist Gary Rossington broke both of his arms, his right leg and his pelvis in the crash, as well as sustaining puncture wounds to his stomach and liver, and took many months to recuperate. Backing vocalist Leslie Hawkins sustained a concussion (which led to ongoing neurological problems), broke her neck in three places and had severe facial lacerations.[citation needed]

Road crew member Steve Lawler suffered severe contusions and facial lacerations. Security manager Gene Odom was seriously burned on his arm and face and lost the sight in one eye as a result of an emergency flare on board the plane that was activated during the crash. Keyboardist Billy Powell's nose was nearly torn off as he suffered severe facial lacerations (as well as deep lacerations to his right knee), and he later caused a controversy by giving a lurid account of Cassie Gaines' final moments on a VH1 Behind The Music special about the band, claiming that the backup singer's throat was cut from ear to ear and that she bled to death in his arms. Powell also claimed that Ronnie Van Zant's head had been smashed. Powell's version of events has been disputed by both Artimus Pyle (who later claimed to have been shot despite no factual evidence) and Judy Van Zant Jenness (remarried), who posted the autopsy reports on the band's web site in early 1998 in order to "set the record straight", while essentially confirming Powell's account.[6] Powell was castigated in print by Pyle and Van Zant Jenness for "needlessly upsetting" the Gaines family. Nevertheless, Powell remained on good terms with the remaining band members.[citation needed]

Drummer Artimus Pyle, the only band member who was ambulatory, crawled out of the plane wreckage with several broken ribs, and hiked some distance from the crash site through swampy woods with road crew members Kenneth Peden, Jr. and Marc Frank. The three injured men finally flagged down farmer Johnny Mote, who had come to investigate. Varying accounts have Mote either firing a warning shot into the air (believing the bedraggled men to be escapees from a nearby penitentiary) or actually (according to Pyle) shooting Pyle in the shoulder — no report is completely reliable. Pyle claimed in a February 2007 appearance on Howard Stern's Sirius radio program that Mote had shot him; Mote has always denied shooting the drummer. In 1996, Pyle called Mote to thank him for his help after the plane crash.[7]

Notably, the third member of The Honkettes, JoJo Billingsley, was not on the plane and in fact was home sick; she had been planning to join the tour in Little Rock, Arkansas, on October 23.[8] Billingsley claimed that she had dreamed of the plane crash and begged Allen Collins by telephone not to continue using the Convair.[9]

The Convair CV-240 itself had been inspected by members of Aerosmith's flight crew for possible use in the early summer of 1977, but was rejected because it was felt that neither the plane nor the crew were up to standards. Aerosmith's assistant chief of flight operations Zunk Buker tells of seeing pilots McCreary and Gray trading a bottle of Jack Daniel's back and forth while he and his father were inspecting the plane. Aerosmith's touring family was also relieved because the band, specifically Steven Tyler and Joe Perry, had been trying to pressure their management into renting that specific plane.[10]

"The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the probable cause of this accident was fuel exhaustion and total loss of power from both engines due to crew inattention to fuel supply. Contributing to the fuel exhaustion were inadequate flight planning and an engine malfunction of undetermined nature in the right engine which resulted in "torching" and higher-than-normal fuel consumption."

—NTSB Accident Report[11]

Cause

Powell, among others, spoke of seeing flames shooting out of the right engine on a trip just prior to the accident. Cassie Gaines was reportedly so fearful of flying in the Convair that she offered to ride in the band's equipment truck instead: Ronnie Van Zant had talked her onto the airplane on October 20.[9]

Pyle maintains in the Howard Stern interview that the fuel gauge in the older model plane malfunctioned and the pilots had failed to manually check the tanks before taking off. In his book Lynyrd Skynyrd: Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock, Gene Odom makes an unsubstantiated accusation that co-pilot William Gray was impaired because he had spent part of the previous night snorting cocaine; the toxicology reports from both pilots' autopsies had found them to be clean for drugs and alcohol.[1]

After the accident, the NTSB removed, inspected, and tested the right engine's magnetos and found it to be operating normally concluding "No mechanical or electrical discrepancies were found during the examination of the right magneto."[1] The inspection also found that "All of the fuel crossfeed and fuel dump valves were in the closed position." [1]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d U.S. National Transportation Safety Board 1978, p. 3. Cite error: The named reference "USNTSB3" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ ASN Aircraft accident Convair CV-240 N55VM Gillsburg, MS; Retrieved 9/3/11
  3. ^ "ASN Aircraft Accident Convair CV-240 N55VM Gillsburg MS". Flight Safety. org website: Aviation Safety network. 19 June 1978. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  4. ^ Pat Adams; Pat Adams and Jaquelyn Cooper (20 October 1977). "The Tragic Plane Crash. What Happened? Gillsburg, MS". The Southern Tribute. Archived from the original on 2013-07-11. Retrieved 6 July 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Behind the Music Remastered on VH1
  6. ^ Brant 2002, p. 155.
  7. ^ Brant 2002.
  8. ^ Brant 2002, p. 147.
  9. ^ a b Brant 2002, p. 151.
  10. ^ Davis 1997, p. 304.
  11. ^ U.S. National Transportation Safety Board 1978, Sec 3.2 Probable Cause, p. 16.

References