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A Pan American World Airways Boeing 707-31B, sister to the accident aircraft lost
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Occurrence | |
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Date | December 12, 1968 |
Summary | Pilot error |
Site | Near Caracas, Venezuela |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Boeing 707-321B |
Aircraft name | Clipper Malay |
Operator | Pan American World Airways |
Registration | N494PA |
Flight origin | New York John F. Kennedy Airport, United States |
Destination | Simón Bolívar International Airport (Venezuela) |
Occupants | 51 |
Passengers | 42 |
Crew | 9 |
Fatalities | 51 |
Survivors | 0 |
Pan Am Flight 217 was a Boeing 707 that crashed near Caracas, Venezuela while on a flight from New York City, USA on December 12, 1968. Though pilot error was to blame, the National Transportation Safety Board concluded the probable cause was undetermined. There were no survivors.[1]
Pan Am Flight 217 was operated by a Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) Boeing 707-321B (registration N494PA, named Clipper Malay).[1] The aircraft was less than a year old — its first flight was on March 7, 1968, and it was delivered to Pan Am on March 28.[1][2][3]
There were nine crew members, including eight from the United States and one from Sweden.[4] The captain was 50 years old and had 24,000 flight hours' experience, including 6,737 hours on the Boeing 707.[5]
The aircraft took off from New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport on a scheduled flight to Caracas Simon Bolivar International Airport on December 12, 1968. As the aircraft was nearing Caracas, it disappeared from air traffic control's radar screens. At 22:05 local time, the aircraft crashed into the Caribbean Sea and exploded. At this point, a call was made to the Venezuelan Navy to search for the aircraft. Wreckage of the Boeing 707 was found 11.4 miles (9.9 nmi; 18.3 km) from Caracas. All 51 passengers and crew died in the crash.[1][4][5][6]
Various aircraft and boats, both naval and civilian, were employed in the search and recovery operation. Some reports stated that many bodies were eaten by sharks.[4] The crash was the deadliest aviation disaster to occur in Venezuela up to that point in time, but was surpassed by Viasa Flight 742 in 1969.[1][7]
One of those who perished in the flight 217 crash was Olga Antonetti, a former Miss Venezuela.[8] Also killed was Rafael Antonio Curra, a Venezuelan ichthyologist and university professor.
The cause of the crash was believed to be pilot error resulting from an optical illusion, created by the lights of the city of Caracas on an upslope. This may have caused the crew to descend until they crashed into the sea, with the loss of all on board.[1][5] However, the National Transportation Safety Board stated the probable cause was undetermined.
The book The Lost Lives of the Clipper Malay provides details of the aircraft, the accident, and the long process of recovering the bodies of the nine crew members and 42 passengers. The recovery lasted more than a month. The book also provides a biographical account of each of the fifty-one victims.[9]
Aviation accidents and incidents in Venezuela
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Aviation accidents and incidents in 1968 (1968)
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Jan 6 Jan 21 Feb 7 Feb 16 Feb 29 Mar 6 Mar 24 Mar 27 Mar 27 Apr 5 Hawker Hunter Tower Bridge incident Apr 8 Apr 20 South African Airways Flight 228 May 3 May 12 May 22 Los Angeles Airways Flight 841 May 28 Garuda Indonesian Airways Flight 892 Jul 1 Seaboard World Airlines Flight 253A Jul 3 BKS Air Transport Flight C.6845 Jul 23 Aug 14 Los Angeles Airways Flight 417 Sep 11 Oct 25 Nov 22 Nov 24 Dec 2 Wien Consolidated Airlines Flight 55 Dec 12 Dec 24 Dec 26 Dec 26 Dec 27 North Central Airlines Flight 458 Dec 27 Dec 31 MacRobertson Miller Airlines Flight 1750 | |