Las Vegas Review-Journal

How deadly Vegas crash 60 years ago made flying safer

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

It is the worst air disaster in Las Vegas history, and there’s no telling how many lives it saved.

On April 21, 1958, 60 years ago Saturday, a fighter jet from Nellis Air Force Base and a United Airlines flight from Los Angeles collided 21,000 feet above the southwest valley.

The two men in the jet and all 47 people on board the airliner were killed when their

crippled planes tumbled to the ground and exploded.

The crash led directly to changes in the way airspace nationwide was shared by commercial and military flights, and it ushered in widespread improvemen­ts in air traffic control.

CRASH

In August 1958, President Dwight Eisenhower specifical­ly referenced the deadly collision over Las Vegas as he signed the Federal Aviation Act, which ordered the creation of what is now the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

“It was a game changer,” said local aviation historian Doug Scroggins, who has researched the crash extensivel­y. “This accident definitely saved lives with the changes that were made after it. There’s no doubt about it.”

‘Nothing they could do’

United Flight 736 was destined for New York with scheduled stops in Denver, Kansas City and Washington. The four-prop DC-7 was half full when it left Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport at 7:37 a.m.

Eight minutes later, an F-100

Super Sabre took off from Nellis with a student pilot in one seat and an instructor in the other.

At 8:30 a.m., the planes’ paths intersecte­d about 9 miles southwest of where Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport is now.

Clark County Museum administra­tor Mark Hall-patton said the

Air Force jet was practicing a maneuver that involved climbing to about 28,000 feet and diving almost straight down to simulate a rapid insertion into enemy airspace.

The sky was clear and visibility excellent that morning, Hall-patton said, but the student pilot was wearing a hood to practice flying using only the instrument­s in the cockpit.

He said the F-100 was traveling at more than 700 mph when it struck the right wing of the prop-driven airliner, sheering off a 12-foot section near the tip.

Several Las Vegas residents who saw the impact reported a puff of smoke, a flash of fire and a shower of metal pieces.

In a Las Vegas Review-journal report the day after the crash, one witness were killed.

In 1958, the crash site was an empty patch of desert several miles from the nearest paved road. Now it is the parking lot for a taco joint, a tire shop and a neighborho­od bar on Cactus Avenue, just east of Decatur Boulevard.

The cross sticks up from a pile of rocks on a trash-strewn hill behind the parking lot. Scroggins thinks the place deserves something more official and permanent.

“There was a point where we could have bought the property and built a park on it or something,” he said, but developmen­t in the area has driven up the price of the land.

“It’d be nice to get something out there, even if it’s just a bronze plaque in the ground,” said Scroggins, who also runs a salvage and effects business that supplies cockpits, passenger cabins and whole planes for movie and television production­s.

A legacy of safety

Hall-patton said the crash also prompted a more obscure regulatory change.

Among the commercial passengers that day were about a dozen people involved in the secret developmen­t of the country’s interconti­nental ballistic missile arsenal. Their deaths set the Cold War program back significan­tly.

After that, Hall-patton said, the military, the defense industry and some large corporatio­ns adopted rules to prevent “a critical mass” of technical people from key projects from traveling together on the same aircraft.

But the lasting legacy of Las Vegas’ deadliest aviation accident is one of safety, Hall-patton said. Airspace is tightly regulated. Air traffic controller­s are in constant contact with one another. And supersonic military aircraft no longer practice over cities or through commercial corridors.

“At least something good came from it. It’s why flying is so amazingly safe today,” Hall-patton said.

“If you look at the numbers, it’s an amazingly safe way to travel, and that’s because we continuous­ly learn whenever there is an accident.”

Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbre­an on Twitter.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Provided by Doug Scroggins This United Airlines DC-7 plane collided with an Air Force jet in 1958 near the current site of Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.
Provided by Doug Scroggins This United Airlines DC-7 plane collided with an Air Force jet in 1958 near the current site of Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States