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1938 Jersey Airport disaster

Coordinates: 49°12′33.22″N 2°10′44.57″W / 49.2092278°N 2.1790472°W / 49.2092278; -2.1790472
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1938 Jersey Airport disaster
A De Havilland DH.86, similar to the aircraft involved
Accident
Date4 November 1938
SummaryPilot error
Sitenear Jersey Airport, Jersey
Aircraft
Aircraft typeDe Havilland D.H.86
Aircraft nameSt Catherine's Bay
OperatorJersey Airways
RegistrationG-ACZN
Flight originJersey Airport
DestinationSouthampton
Passengers12
Crew1
Fatalities13
Survivors0
Ground casualties
Ground fatalities1

The 1938 Jersey Airport disaster occurred at 10:50am on Friday 4 November 1938 when the Jersey Airways de Havilland D.H.86 airliner St Catherine's Bay (G-ACZN) crashed in the parish of Saint Brelade, 500 yards east of Jersey Airport, killing the pilot and all twelve passengers on board as well as farm hand Edmund Le Cornu, who was working on the ground.[1] In terms of loss of life, it was the worst crash of a rigid aircraft on British territory to date and the second-worst overall crash of a British rigid aircraft after the crash of an Imperial Airways airliner in Belgium in 1933 (in which 15 people died).

The airliner had just taken off from Jersey en route to Southampton. The sky was overcast, with a cloud base of 120–150 feet. The aircraft had been fully inspected and was not carrying a full load.

The Air Ministry investigation concluded that the accident was due to pilot error. The pilot had made a climbing turn into the clouds and inadvertently allowed the aircraft to sideslip when he was still too close to the ground to avert disaster. The aircraft had exploded and several bodies had been thrown up to 40 feet away.

Among the dead were the daughter, son-in-law and baby granddaughter of surveyor and aerial archaeology pioneer G. A. Beazeley.[2]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Air Disaster Inquest", The Times, 10 November 1938
  2. ^ Obituary, The Times, 9 November 1938

References

[edit]
  • "Jersey Air Disaster Inquest", The Times, 7 November 1938
  • "Crash that Caused 14 Deaths 'An Error of Airmanship'", The Times, 19 April 1939
  • From Sea Eagle to Flamingo: a history of Channel Island Airways, Neville Doyle, 1991 (Self Publishing Association)
[edit]

49°12′33.22″N 2°10′44.57″W / 49.2092278°N 2.1790472°W / 49.2092278; -2.1790472