On This Day in Aviation History: July 19th
On July 19th,
• 1989, United Airlines flight 232, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10 en route for Chicago O’Hare from Denver, crashes in Sioux City, Iowa, following the uncontained failure of the #2 engine and the loss of all hydraulic controls. What followed would be remembered as one of history’s most extraordinary feats of flying, as the crew, led by Capt. Al Haynes, guided the plane to the Sioux City airport using only differential thrust from the two remaining engines. The plane crash landed at the Sioux City airport, allowing 184 of the 296 on board to fly another day.
The Des Moines Register this past week published an extensively detailed piece looking back at the disaster, interviewing people involved from every angle, from the flight crew to some surviving passengers, the control tower supervisor to the chaplain.
“It is still a wound,” said Jerry Schemmel of Littleton, Colo., a passenger on Flight 232. His good friend and boss, Jay Ramsdell, died in the crash. “It is still a wound that I don’t think has healed completely, nor will it ever. It is part of my life. I know that it always will be. I have dealt with it about as best as I can, but it will never go away. But you move on and you try to deal with it.”
- Cockpit voice recorder transcript [PDF]
- Capt. Al Haynes gives a speech about the crash at NASA’s Dryden Research Center




























Pingback by Twenty Years Ago – Remembering UA232 | Flight Wisdom on 19 July 2009:
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Pingback by mcdonnell douglas dc 10 on 20 March 2010:
[...] DC-10, which was built by McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Corp, a defense/commercial airliner firm. …United Airlines Flight 232 Crash Video – July 19th in …20 years ago today, the captain and flight crew of United Airlines flight 232 achieved one of the [...]