December 24, 1946, Western Air Lines, Douglas DC-3 (NC45395) Cuyapaipe Mountain, CA
It was Christmas Eve 1946 when Western Air Lines Flight 44 departed the town of Holtville in California's Imperial Valley for the coastal city of San Diego. The flight was to continue on to Long Beach with it's final destination Los Angeles International Airport.
Flight 44 had nine passengers and three crew members when the DC-3 began it's westerly climb from Holtville to cross the mountains and foothills that make up the eastern coastal range of San Diego. The twin-engine airliner was cleared by the tower at Lindbergh Field in San Diego to fly under contact (visual) rules at an altitude of 7,000 feet. The night was cold and dark with rain and overcast prevailing along most of the route. Upon reaching it's cruising altitude of 7,000 feet, the flight was still east and approaching the vicinity of Mount Laguna. Maybe it was the dark night, a mistaken visual ground reference, or possibly the pilots misread their flight instruments. The fact is no one will ever know why Flight 44 began it's premature decent into San Diego's Lindbergh Field.
At 7:19 PM, while traveling nearly 175 miles-per-hour, the DC-3 struck the eastern slope of Cuyapaipe Mountain at an elevation of 6,120 feet.The impact instantly demolished the aircraft into a burning pile of metal. All twelve were killed outright. Because of bad weather, it took searchers nearly three days to discover the smoldering wreckage and ground search parties more than six hours to reach the plane by horseback.
By coincidence Western Air Lines Flight 44 crashed less than a mile from where American Airlines Flight 6-103 met it's own fate just nine months prior (see story). The probable cause for either accident remains undetermined to this date.
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HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
First located by air during a 2003 re-position flight, this site and another located within a half mile has intrigued me for years. Having known and researched the 1946 mishaps of two golden-age airliners that crashed in this area, visiting these sites were on the top of my aviation archaeology list.
On November 9, 2009, I had the opportunity to hike into this remote location on Cuyapaipe Mountain with fellow wreckchasers Trey Brandt and Steve Owen.
Our first discovery was not a DC-3 at all, but a Piper Cherokee that crashed in 1968 (See story in General Aviation Archaeology). The second site we visited that day was the ill-fated Flight 44. The site, as many commercial airline crash sites had been "cleaned" of large fragments. Gone was the tail section, wings, and complete whole engines. All that remained were fragments of structure and components.
Founded in 1925, Western Air Lines was a large airline based in California, with operations throughout the Western United States, and hubs at Los Angeles International Airport and Salt Lake City International Airport.
During the 1940s, Western Air Lines operated a fleet of Douglas DC-3 Airliners.
Western Airlines ceased operations on September 9, 1986.Douglas DC-3 (NC45395) S/N: 11642, was a converted C-53D-DO that was utilized as a troop and cargo transport by the military during World War II.
The aircraft accumulated a total time of 3,699 hours since it's first flight in 1943. The aircraft was leased from the War Assets Corporation and modified to Western Air Lines specifications.
The aircraft was placed into commercial service by Western Air Lines on December 13, 1945.Craig Fuller of Aviation Archaeology Investigation and Research (AAIR) generously provided our team with photographs taken during the 1946 recovery efforts.
From these photographs and the remaining wreckage, we were able to positively confirm that we had in fact located the crash site of Flight 44. (Photo courtesy of Steve Owen)An important find we made at the site were these fragments from one of Flight 44's two pressure altimeters.
According to the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) report both altimeters were recovered and closely examined by the CAB accident investigators for any errors. Apparently, this examination was made on-site and not in the lab.We were fortunate to have spent most of the late afternoon at the site. Even more fortunate not to have encountered any rattlesnakes.
We ended our visit to the crash site of Western Air Lines Flight 44 on Cuyapaipe Mountain as we begun, scrambling through the dense manzanita and scrub oak. (Photo courtesy of Steve Owen)