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Based on the material recovered, a positive correlation between the wreckage and the 1952 crash of Airman Anderson's C-124 was made. Tonja Anderson heard about it on the news.
The body of Air Force Captain Delbert Draskey arrived at Chicago O'Hare Airport. He died in a 1952 C-124 plane crash on Alaska's Gannett mountain.
The C-124, with a crew of 11, crashed during a flight from McChord Air Base, Wash., to Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage. The cause of the crash was never determined.
This summer is the fourth that U.S. troops and civilians have combed Colony Glacier in Alaska to recover wreckage and identify 52 service members aboard a C-124 Globemaster II that crashed in 1952.
The 1952 Moses Lake C-124 Crash The worst accident for the U.S. Air Force occurred on December 20, 1952, near Moses Lake, Washington.
The C-124 crash made national headlines, one in a rash of military air fatalities at the end of 1952. It was just one of three military plane crashes in Alaska in a 15-day period.
Recovery operations began that June and confirmed it was the debris of the missing C-124 crash site, now 14 miles from its original point of impact.
On November 22, 1952, a C-124 Globemaster II crashed on Mount Gannett in Alaska, killing all 52 people on board. The crash was likely caused by a combination of severe weather conditions (high ...
The C-124 was torn apart and exploded, killing 82 of the passengers and five of the crewmen. To this day, it's the single deadliest plane crash in the history of Washington state.
A painstaking search for the bodies of plane crash victims is continuing — 70 years after the accident. On November 22, 1952, a U.S. Air Force C-124 Globemaster II flying from McChord Air Force ...
Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors and contractors came together in June to search for additional human remains from a C-124 Globemaster II crash, that originated from McChord Field, that happened nearly ...
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