List of accidents and incidents involving the DC-3 in 1962

This is a list of accidents and incidents involving the Douglas DC-3A that occurred in 1962, including aircraft based on the DC-3 airframe such as the Douglas C-47 Skytrain and Lisunov Li-2. Military accidents are included; and hijackings and incidents of terrorism are covered, although acts of war involving military aircraft are outside the scope of this list.

January

  • January 25: Montana Gov. Donald Grant Nutter was en route to a speaking engagement in Cut Bank, Montana when the C-47 Skytrain he was a passenger in crashed. Winds exceeding 100 mph sheared off one of the wings of the plane, causing the aircraft to go down in Wolf Creek Canyon north of Helena. Also killed in the crash were Dennis Gordon, his executive secretary; Edward Wren, commissioner of agriculture; and three members of the Montana Air National Guard: Maj. Clifford Hanson, Maj. Joseph Devine and Master Sgt. Charles Ballard.

March

  • March 3: Aeronorte DC-3 registered PP-YQN crashed at Nanuque, Brazil.[1]

April

August

  • August 25: A Douglas C-47A-30-DL operated by JAT and registered as YU-ABH, crashed on Mt. Prenj (28 km north of Mostar Airport). All 32 occupants survived, but the aircraft was destroyed by a post crash fire.[5]

See also

References

  1. Berry 1971, p. 26
  2. Staff writers (1962-04-19). "2 Killed in Love Field Air Crash". The Dallas Morning News.
  3. Staff writers (1962-04-20). "Burns Fatal to Victim of Crash". The Dallas Morning News.
  4. "NTSB Report FTW62A0028". National Transportation Safety Board. Retrieved 2009-06-09.
  5. "Crash of a Douglas C-47A-30-DL near Mostar". Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives.
  • Peter Berry, ed. (1971). The Douglas Commercial Story. Air-Britain Historians.

Notes

^Note A Military versions of the DC-3 were known as C-47 Skytrain, C-48, C-49, C-50, C-51, C-52, C-53 Skytrooper, C-68, C-84, C-117 Super Dakota and YC-129 by the United States Army Air Forces and as the R4D by the United States Navy. In Royal Air Force (and other British Commonwealth air forces') service, these aircraft were known as Dakotas.

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