Accident | |
---|---|
Date | November 14, 1970 |
Summary | Controlled flight into terrain due to pilot error |
Site | Near Tri-State Airport, Huntington, West Virginia, U.S. 38°22′27″N 82°34′42″W / 38.37417°N 82.57833°W |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Douglas DC-9-31 |
Operator | Southern Airways |
Registration | N97S |
Flight origin | Kinston Regional Jetport, Kinston, North Carolina |
1st stopover | Tri-State Airport, Huntington, West Virginia |
2nd stopover | Hopkinsville-Christian County Airport, Hopkinsville, Kentucky |
Last stopover | Alexandria International Airport, Alexandria, Louisiana |
Destination | Baton Rouge Metropolitan Airport, Baton Rouge, Louisiana |
Occupants | 75 |
Passengers | 71 |
Crew | 4 |
Fatalities | 75 |
Survivors | 0 |
Southern Airways Flight 932 was a chartered Southern Airways Douglas DC-9 domestic United States commercial jet flight from Stallings Field (ISO) in Kinston, North Carolina, to Huntington Tri-State Airport/Milton J. Ferguson Field (HTS) near Kenova and Ceredo, West Virginia. At 7:36 pm on November 14, 1970, the aircraft crashed into a hill just short of the Tri-State Airport, killing all 75 people on board in what has been recognized as "the worst sports-related air tragedy in U.S. history".[1][2]
The plane was carrying 37 members of the Marshall University Thundering Herd football team, eight members of the coaching staff, 25 boosters, two pilots, two flight attendants, and a charter coordinator.[3] The team was returning home after a 17–14 loss to the East Carolina Pirates at Ficklen Stadium in Greenville, North Carolina.[4]
At the time, Marshall's athletic teams rarely traveled by plane, since most away games were within easy driving distance of the campus. The team originally planned to cancel the flight, but changed plans and chartered the Southern Airways DC-9.[5] The accident is the deadliest tragedy to have affected any sports team in U.S. history.[6]
It was the second college football team plane crash in a little over a month, after the October 2 crash that killed 31 (head coach, 14 Wichita State players, and 16 others).