June 30, 1956: Trans World Airlines / United Air Lines, Lockheed L-1049 (N6902C) / Douglas DC-7 (N6324C) Mid-Air Collision, Grand Canyon, AZ
June 30, 1956. Two transcontinental airliners departed three minutes apart from Los Angeles International Airport in California. Trans World Airlines Flight 2, (N6902C), a Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation en-route to Kansas City, MO and then continuing to Baltimore/Washington D.C. TWA Flight 2 carried 70 passengers and crew, many of which were TWA employees and families traveling on company passes. United Air Lines Flight 718 was a Douglas DC-7, (N6324C) bound for Chicago, IL with 58 passengers and crew.
Based on their destinations and routes, both aircraft would be flying converging courses to their destinations; however a request for altitude change by TWA Flight 2 due to weather brought both aircraft to fly at a cruising altitude of 21,000 feet.
At 1030 AM (PST), both aircraft collided over eastern the Grand Canyon in Northern Arizona. There were no warnings, no alerts, and no survivors among the 128 persons. Only a garbled distress call received from United flight 718 would give any hint of a problem.
After an hour of repeated calls from air traffic control, the two flights were officially reported as missing and overdue. A search for the airliners was initiated by several military and state agencies, but it was Palen Hudgin and his brother flying an air tour with Grand Canyon Airlines that would later recall seeing smoke near Temple Butte earlier in the day. The two returned before dark and confirmed the impact site of the TWA Constellation on the northeast slope of Temple Butte. Not far from the burning wreckage was the Constellation's distinctive triple tail smashed against the boulders.
Authorities acted quickly on the Hudgin's report of the downed aircraft and the following morning a military helicopter would not only confirm the brother's sighting, but also discovered the smoldering impact site of the DC-7 atop a 1,000 foot ledge of Chuar Butte. At the time it was the worst air disaster in the history of civil aviation.
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HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
The following photos depict this historical but tragic event in aviation history. As a result of this accident many improvements were made to the national airspace system such as nationwide radar coverage and ATC transponder requirements. After a series of congressional hearings, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) was also created as a result of this tragedy.
Since 1990, I have made five trips into the Grand Canyon to map and document the impact sites and remaining wreckage. Each examination visit required a 6-7 day backpacking trip (40+ miles) as well as a solo crossing by raft of the Colorado River to reach the sites.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ARCHIVE
The Grand Canyon National Park maintains a collection of both prehistoric and historic artifacts recovered from the depths of the canyon.
Aside from an extensive library documenting the event, the only artifact from the 1956 accident currently in the archive is this landing gear door panel from the United Air Lines DC-7.ARIZONA HISTORICAL SOCIETY ARCHIVE
Located a few hundred miles south of Grand Canyon in Tucson, Arizona are a few fragments of the accident housed in the collection archives of the Arizona Historical Society (AHS).
This fragment of the co-pilot's flight control wheel was located at the UAL main impact site. It was anonymously donated to the collection in 1967.11 year old Fred Staecker was traveling by himself on Flight 718 to visit his grandparents for a fishing trip in Wisconsin.
He was scheduled on a later flight but it was decided to put him on an earlier flight so he could start his vacation sooner.
He was taken to the airport by his parents. They saw him board the plane and left him in the care of the stewardesses.
This was to have been a very special vacation trip for Fred. A month ago he had dicarded his crutches after suffering a broken leg in a football game. Before the leg healed enough to permit the use of crutches, he had been in traction, encumbered by a heavy cast and then confined to a wheelchair.Richard Payne Jr., 14 and Monica Payne, 9 were traveling with their father Richard on TWA Flight 2.
Richard D. Payne, a TWA reservations supervisor in Los Angeles was traveling with his two children.
Friends said Payne was taking the children to the farm of their grandparents near Des Moines, Ia. where they planned to spend the summer.
Mrs. Payne, did not make the trip.