Northeast Airlines Flight 258

Northeast Airlines
Accident summary
Date August 15, 1958 (1958-08-15)
Summary Pilot error
Site Near Nantucket Memorial Airport, Massachusetts
Passengers 31
Crew 3
Fatalities 25
Injuries (non-fatal) 9
Survivors 9
Aircraft type Convair CV-240
Operator Northeast Airlines
Registration N90670
Flight origin La Guardia Airport, New York City
Destination Nantucket Memorial Airport

Northeast Airlines Flight 258 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from New York's La Guardia Airport that crashed while trying to land at Nantucket Memorial Airport, Massachusetts, at 11:34 on the night of August 15, 1958. All three crew-members and 22 of the 31 passengers were killed, among them Gordon Dean, former chairman of the United States Atomic Energy Commission.[1]

The accident aircraft, a Convair 240, commenced a non-precision VOR approach to the uncontrolled airport despite the fact that visibility, at one-eighth of a mile in fog, was below the legal minimum required for such an approach. The aircraft flew into the ground a third of a mile short of the Runway 24 threshold and some 600 feet to the right of the extended centre-line.[2] A post-crash fire ensued; most survivors as well as many of the dead were ejected from the wreckage.[3][4]

A Civil Aeronautics Board investigation found that the captain of the aircraft failed to acknowledge transmissions warning him of the deteriorating weather conditions in the minutes before the crash. The CAB also criticised Northeast's training and operational procedures, noting deficiencies in aircrew proficiency, recordkeeping and monitoring of company radio frequencies.[5]

References

  1. "Gordon Dean, 52, Was Truman Aide; Victim in Nantucket Crash Headed A.E.C. for 3 Years " New York Times Aug 17, 1958 link
  2. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19580815-1
  3. Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, August 16, 1958
  4. "19 on airliner killed in crash at Nantucket; " New York Times ,Aug 19, 1958link
  5. Lewiston (ME) Daily News, March 27, 1959

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