Trisha Shetty (Editor)

1949 Exhall mid air collision

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Total injuries (non-fatal)
  
0

Registration
  
G-AHCW

Total survivors
  
0

Date
  
19 February 1949

Total fatalities
  
14

Crew count
  
4

Site
  
Exhall, Warwickshire, United Kingdom

Flight origin
  
Northolt Airport, England, United Kingdom

Destination
  
Glasgow-Renfrew Airport, Scotland, United Kingdom

Similar
  
1949 MacRobertson Miller Avi, 1949 Manchester BEA Dou, 1949 Strato‑Freight Curtiss C, 1949 Queensland Airlines L, Eastern Air Lines Flight 537

The Exhall mid-air collision happened on Saturday 19 February 1949 over the village of Exhall when a British European Airways Douglas DC-3 / Douglas Dakota collided in clear weather with a Royal Air Force Avro Anson T21.

The Dakota was on a flight from Northolt Airport near London to Glasgow-Renfrew Airport in Scotland. With a crew of four it was carrying six passengers, and had taken off from Northolt at 09:13 hr. The Royal Air Force Avro Anson T21 was being operated by No. 2 Air Navigation School on a cross-country training exercise from RAF Middleton St. George.

The two aircraft collided at 4500 ft near the village of Exhall, near Coventry in Warwickshire. The wreckage fell near an old peoples' home, the Exhall Lodge Hospital. There were no survivors.

Although the weather at the time of the crash was clear, the accident investigation concluded that the crew of neither aircraft saw each other, possibly due to glare from the sun, and blamed the accident on a failure on the part of both captains to keep a proper look-out for other aircraft.

References

1949 Exhall mid-air collision Wikipedia


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