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1950 Tête de l'Obiou C-54 crash

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Tete de I'Obiou accident
A Douglas C-54 similar to the accident aircraft
Accident
Date13 November 1950
SummaryCFIT
SiteNear Grenoble, France
44°46′31″N 05°50′22″E / 44.77528°N 5.83944°E / 44.77528; 5.83944
Aircraft
Aircraft typeDouglas C-54B-1-DC
OperatorCurtiss-Reid Flying Service
RegistrationCF-EDN
Flight originRome-Ciampino Airport
DestinationParis-Orly Airport
Passengers51
Crew7
Fatalities58
Survivors0

The Tête de l'Obiou accident was on 13 November 1950. Curtiss-Reid Flying Service had been operating a scheduled service between Paris and Rome since 1945. On 13 November 1950, a Paris-bound Douglas C-54B-1-DC aircraft crashed on the Grande Tête de l'Obiou mountain, 48 km (30 mi) south of Grenoble. All 51 passengers and 7 crew were killed. The aircraft was 50 miles (80 km) off course.

Flight attendant Helen Johnston's body was missing for weeks until it was found in a crevasse on the mountain.

Accident narrative

The aircraft was carrying fifty-one pilgrims, all but two of whom were Canadians and fifteen of whom were Catholic priests, on the return leg to Montreal Dorval airport from a Holy Year pilgrimage in Rome. After departing Rome Ciampino at 14:16, it crossed the Mediterranean via Bastia in Corsica, whence the flight plan called for it to pass over the Istres non-directional beacon. Whereas the crew reported its position at Istres at 16:26, the aircraft was already some 40 nautical miles to the east. A second position report, at 16"44, put it over Montelimar, whereas it was in reality in the vicinity of the airport at Gap-Tallard. Some fifteen minutes later, the aircraft struck the top of the 9,150-feet high Tête de l'Obiou mountain, less than six feet from the summit. Night was falling and the mountain was enveloped by cloud at the time of the accident. All on board were killed instantly. Alpine rescuers soon reached the scene notwithstanding severe conditions, one being killed by an avalanche during the ascent. However, the ruggedness of the terrain and the high impact forces greatly impeded the recovery operation. Fifteen of the dead were never identified. In July 1951, six Italian forest workers were prosecuted for looting the crash site and stealing money, jewellery and religious objects from the wreckage.

See also

References

  1. L.-E. Hamelin, L'Obiou: Entre Dieu et Diable (Montreal: Editions du Meridien, 1990), p. 165.
  2. Montreal Gazette, 28 July 1951.
  3. Cimetière Canadien. "Cimetière Canadien". wikimapia.

External links

Aviation accidents and incidents in 1950 (1950)
Jan 7 Sverdlovsk plane crashJan 26 USAF C-54 disappearanceFeb 13 British Columbia B-36 crashMar 7 Northwest Orient Flight 307Mar 12 Llandow air disasterJun 12 Air France DC-4 accidentsJun 23 Myrtle Beach USAF C-46D crashJun 24 Northwest Orient Flight 2501Jun 26 Australian National Airways Douglas DC-4 crashJul 28 Panair do Brasil Flight 099Jul 30 Karaganda Il-12 crashAug 5 Fairfield-Suisun Boeing B-29 crashAug 31 TWA Flight 903Sep 14 Geysir air crashOct 31 Heathrow Vickers Viking crashNov 3 Air India Flight 245Nov 13 Tête de l'Obiou C-54 crashDec 30 Maroochy air crash
1949   ◄    ►   1951
Aviation accidents and incidents in France between 1950 and 1999
1950–
1954
1955–
1959
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1964
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1969
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^ Occurred in overseas departments and overseas territories
* Occurred in French Algeria, now an independent country
1785–1949 ◄ 1950–1999 ► 2000–


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