September 14, 1958: Piper PA-22 Tri-Pacer (N7621D) near Pahrump, NV
This was a simple weekend pleasure flight by friends that never made it home. Arthur Whittaker, a well known and liked business man in the Las Vegas area and a small group of friends decided to rent a nearly new Piper PA-22 Tri-Pacer for the day.
They departed Skyport Airport (North Las Vegas Airport) about 11:00 AM on a Sunday with clear skies and light breezes. They first headed for Ash Meadows Field and then flew on to Jean, Nevada. At 4:00 PM, the Piper departed Jean for the return flight to Skyport Field. Taking what appeared to be a scenic detour around the Western slopes of the 8,500+ foot Spring Mountain Range, the aircraft impacted a 6,000 foot ridge-line in a relatively nose-low, flat attitude. There was no post crash fire, but all occupants were killed in the accident.
HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
This accident site was discovered during 1996 while searching Southern Nevada's Charleston Mountain Range for a Beechcraft AT-11 that crashed during World War 2.
When we found this wreck, we thought we found the AT-11. The next day we hiked to the site only to find it was this Piper Tri-Pacer. Several years passed before I was able to gather enough photos and documentation to determine the story behind this accident. A thank you to Joe Idoni for putting the pieces together.
THE PILOT
Arthur "Art" Whittaker was 40 years old at the time of the accident and held a Private Pilot Certificate. He was a prominent business man in Las Vegas. He was the owner of Art's Loan and Jewelry Shop and part owner of the Lucky Star Casino in Henderson, Nevada.
Passengers killed along with Whittaker included James Valdivia, 42 a civilian engineer at the Nevada Atomic Test Site. Herb Sturmer, 43 and Jack Rencher, 45 also perished in the crash.THE ACCIDENT
The crash site was discovered and reported by U.S.A.F. Captain James Laing on a routine flight from Nellis A.F.B. just hours after the accident. A rescue party arrived shortly later to find no survivors.
The accident made the front page headlines in the Las Vegas Review Journal a day after the accident.The inverted fuselage and left wing of the Piper among the boulders.
The details of the accident were difficult to locate since there was no record of an accident report (the national database begins January 1962). There is also no record of the accident wreckage on the Civil Air Patrol's wreckage locator database.
Fellow Aviation Archaeologist Joe Idoni searched online newspaper archives to bring this story to life. Thanks Joe!
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