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British RAF crash in Detroit, Michigan in the '50s...

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British RAF crash in Detroit, Michigan in the '50s...

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Old 29th Jan 2007, 06:06
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British RAF crash in Detroit, Michigan in the '50s...

There was an airshow crash in Detroit circa 1957 but I can't remember the details. I believe it was a De Havilland delta wing type aircraft. I've done several searches for said incident without coming up with any info.

Over the years pieces of the plane have been found in residential yards.

Anyone know about this incident?
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Old 29th Jan 2007, 08:45
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Avro Vulcan B.1, October24, 1958, From RAF Waddington, UK en-route to Lincoln AFB, Nebraska. Total electrical failure over Dresden 60nm NE of Detroit, tried to divert to Kellog Field on standby (battery) power but battery, which should have given power for 20min, was flat after 3min. Of six on board, only the co-pilot ejected, but he drowned in Lake St Clair (not wearing lifejacket). Aircraft went in at 60-70 degree dive into residential area of Detroit.
Details from V-Force by Andrew Brookes.
Don't know if any ground casualties, ISTR it impacted a waste tipping site.

Last edited by Gainesy; 29th Jan 2007 at 09:05.
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Old 29th Jan 2007, 08:58
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IIRC correctly wasn't this the Vulcan that went in at very high speed vertically , making a crater in the ground outside Chicago?
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Old 29th Jan 2007, 10:33
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RETDPI

Are you thinking of XL390 that piled in 12 august 1978? Thread is; http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthread.php?t=125259
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Old 29th Jan 2007, 11:30
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It was before my time in the service but IIRC a V -Bomber went in as described near Chicago. I could well be wrong in assuming it was a Vulcan.
I'm sure somebody from that era will soon fill us in.
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Old 29th Jan 2007, 20:06
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I'm not sure if there was more than one Vulcan crash in N America, but certainly a Air Electronics Officer named Jamie Hamilton was killed in a Vulcan crash in the USA.
It was the same Jamie Hamilton who escaped unhurt when the 120 squadron Shackleton crashed in flames and burnt out in Scotland in 1962.
Second time unlucky............
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Old 29th Jan 2007, 22:28
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Lads; the MK 1 referred to in Posts 1 and 2 seems to be XA908. The other loss was a MK 2, XL390 and referred to at Post 4 and, I believe, 3. I'm not intimate with N American geography but I'm sure Detroit and Chicago are quite far apart.

If you follow the link in Post 4, you will probably find all the Vulcan information you could want.
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Old 30th Jan 2007, 18:26
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The loss of Avro Vulcan B1 XA908 in October 1958 near Detroit MI should have a National Transportation Safety Board report. Reports for that time period are not available on line generally but have to be searched out at the NTSB reading room. How intersted is Alexisdetroit?
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Old 31st Jan 2007, 06:34
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On a scale of 1 to 10...

...with 10 being the most interested I would say a 8 or 9.

Last edited by AlexisDetroit; 25th Oct 2007 at 17:53.
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Old 31st Jan 2007, 08:53
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Very sad indeed. I had a book on the vulcan which stated that he drowned not because he was not wearing a lifejacket but because he could not swim which struck me as odd particularly as he served on a maritime aircraft. I don't know what RAF entry requirements were in the 50s and 60s but I would have that that the abilty to swim would have been necessary for maritime aircraft.
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Old 31st Jan 2007, 19:23
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Ref. my earlier posts .
Gainesy has correctly identified the incident I was thinking of (from recall of crew bar chat of many years ago). I noted his post later.
Detroit it most certainly was. Apologies for any confusion possibly caused .
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Old 1st Feb 2007, 18:35
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Okay AlexisDetroit. Nothing difficult is ever easy, I guess. NTSB investigates all aircraft accidents in the U.S. that are not military on military/public property. Except they didn't exist until 1964. Before that the Civil Aeronautics Board did accident investigation. Except they were disestablished in 1985 or so. They sent their records to NTSB. Had a nice phonecon with the NTSB records people and they can not find anything in their holdings.

CAB records also went to the national archives and I think I have identified and found the right records class (CAB Office of General Counsel -accident investigations 1952-1969). Inquiry off to national archives and we'll see what happens.
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Old 24th Oct 2007, 13:21
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I live in the area of the crash you are questioning in 1958.
Look at this website and scroll half way down the page for pictures and talk of the crash.

http://atdetroit.net/forum/messages/6790/36342.html
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Old 24th Oct 2007, 19:47
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I grew up near Detroit City Airport (DET)...

I was nine years old at the time of the RAF crash on the eastside but only remember folks talking about it. I am a retired Detroit firefighter and will pass on the photos of the crash to some still on the DFD.

About the time of the 1958 RAF crash in Detroit there was a freighter collision off of Harsens Island in the St. Clair River, possibly in the bend in the river near where the Idle Hour Hotel was. Said bend was replaced but the seaway channel for shipping. I remember going out on the Russell Island ferry with my father to see the sunk freighter with only its two superstructures being above the water. Do you know of said ship sinking and do you have access to any photos of it?
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Old 24th Oct 2007, 22:08
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Don't know if any ground casualties, ISTR it impacted a waste tipping site.
No fatalities on the ground, considerable damage though:
"OCT. 24, 1958: A British Royal Air Force bomber jet -- trailing smoke and flame and its pilot calling out "mayday" -- crashed on Ashland Avenue near the Detroit River on the city's far east side. All six crew members were killed. Three homes were destroyed and about 40 others were damaged. Wreckage was scattered into nearby Grosse Pointe. No one on the ground was killed; two women were treated for burns.
The four-engine delta-winged plane was on a training mission, flying from Lincolnshire, England, to Lincoln, Neb. Crippled, it dived from 45,000 feet, passing over hospitals and schools on its path to the ground. The impact was so hard that searchers dug 70 feet in an unsuccessful effort to find the plane's cockpit. The largest piece of wreckage found was a 6-foot section of wing that landed on a porch."
(Note obligatory "hospitals and schools" )
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Old 24th Oct 2007, 22:44
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Ashland is a stone's throw from the Detroit River...

I wonder if the pilots were trying for the river that is less than a half miles away from the impact area. Did that plane have a history of trouble like the BOAC airliner of the 1950s. The make and model of the BOAC plane slips me.
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Old 25th Oct 2007, 10:41
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I think you mean the very early De Havilland Comet airliners, which had structural failures because of metal fatigue. The Vulcan was built by the Avro company, was entirely different and did not have any such problems.
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Old 25th Oct 2007, 11:31
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Maritime pilots & swimming

KeMac, not sure about the 1950s, but it seems not to have been an issue in the 1940s: my father was a Sunderland pilot who couldn't swim a stroke!
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Old 25th Oct 2007, 12:48
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Here is a list of newspapers that had an article related to it.

http://news.google.com/archivesearch...0/1958&lnav=dt
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Old 22nd Jan 2008, 05:50
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RAF bomber crash in Detroit

AlexisDetroit
For several years now, I've tried to find info on this crash. I was almost 5 years old on Oct 24, 1958 when the aircraft nearly crashed into our house. I lived at 477 Ashland Ave, when the aircraft flew just over us and crashed down the street. I still hear the roar of the engines and the house shaking as if in an earthquake. I would appreciate if you could email the photos you spoke of, if you still have them. I can't find any newspaper articles other than calling the Detroit News archives desk many years ago with no luck. I've recently done a Google Earth search to see the area, and saw my old Guyton Elementary school.

I have been haunted by this memory for years, and for many years could not stay indoors when a low flying aircraft passed overhead. Funny thing is, I went into the aviation field in 1974.
Thanks in advance for any info
Ckurshil
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