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Southern Airways Flight 242 was a DC-9-31 jet, registered N1335U, that executed a forced landing on a highway in New Hope, Paulding County, Georgia, United States after suffering hail damage and losing power on both engines in a severe thunderstorm on April 4, 1977.2 At the time of the accident, the Southern Airways aircraft was flying from Huntsville, Alabama to Atlanta, Georgia. Sixty-three people on the aircraft (including the flight crew) and nine people on the ground died; twenty passengers survived, as well as the two flight attendants; one passenger who initially survived died around one month later.
Accident sequenceThe flight crew, consisting of captain Bill McKenzie and co-pilot Lyman Keele, was advised of the presence of embedded thunderstorms and possible tornadoes along their general route prior to their departure from Huntsville, but was not subsequently updated of the fact that the cells formed up into a squall line. The flight crew had flown through that same area from Atlanta earlier in the day, and encountered only mild turbulence and light rain during those flights. The weather system had apparently intensified in the meantime. The peak convective activity was later shown on ground radar to be near Rome, Georgia, to which the flight was cleared to proceed by Air Traffic Control. The crew attempted to pick out a path through the cells depicted on their onboard weather radar display, but were apparently misled by the radar's attenuation effect and proceeded toward what they perceived as a low intensity area, which in fact was the peak convective activity point, attenuated by rain. As the flight descended from its cruise altitude of 17,000 feet to 14,000 feet near Rome VOR, it apparently entered a thunderstorm cell and encountered a massive amount of water and hail. The hail was intense enough to break the aircraft's windshield, and due to ingestion of the water and hail combination, both engines were damaged and underwent flameout. The crew attempted unsuccessfully to restart the engines, gliding down unpowered while simultaneously trying to find an emergency landing field within range. Air Traffic Control suggested Dobbins Air Force Base, about 20 miles east, as a possible landing site, but it was beyond reach. Another option, Cartersville Airport, a general aviation airport about 15 miles north with a much shorter runway intended for light aircraft was considered, but it was behind the aircraft and now out of reach. As the aircraft ran out of altitude and options, gliding with a broken windshield and no engine power, the crew made visual contact with the ground and spotted a straight section of a rural highway below. They executed an unpowered forced landing on that road, but during the rollout the aircraft collided with a gas station/grocery store and other structures. The flight crew and 60 passengers were killed during the forced landing due to impact forces and fire, but 19 of the passengers ultimately survived, as well as both flight attendants. Eight people on the ground died. One passenger initially survived the crash and died on June 5, 1977. A seriously injured person on the ground died around one month later. The NTSB defined the injuries for them as serious, as the agency defined a fatal injury as one that occurs within 7 days of the accident. NTSB investigation and final reportThe NTSB investigated the accident and concluded the following Probable Cause in its majority report, issued on January 26, 1978:3
The NTSB also included the following Contributing Factors:
Francis H. McAdams, one of the four NTSB members, dissented with the other members and filed the following Probable Cause in the same report:
McAdams also added the following Contributing Factor:
Flight attendants commendationThe flight attendants on board were Catherine Lemoine Cooper as senior flight attendant, and Sandy Purl Ward, second flight attendant. The NTSB noted in its report that despite the fact that the flight crew did not communicate with the cabin crew during the emergency sequence, the flight attendants nevertheless on their own initiative briefed and prepared the passengers for an emergency landing as the plane glided down. Just prior to touchdown, with no prior notice or cue from the flight crew that the plane was about to crash land, the flight attendants "saw trees" in the windows, and immediately yelled to the passengers a final "grab your ankles!" command. The flight attendants also helped evacuate the passengers from the burning plane after the crash landing. The NTSB concluded that:
Purl wrote the book Am I Alive? about the experience and is a motivational speaker. In her book, she tells the story of the crash and the history of critical incident stress management's entry into the aviation industry.4 Both her story and her efforts have been paramount in helping the industry develop official programs of support and rehabilitation for airline personnel and their families who are involved in airline disasters. Accident locationThe NTSB identified the accident site in its report as "Highway 92 Spur, bisecting New Hope, GA".3 They also include the geographical coordinates of Coordinates: . In addition, the NTSB report includes a depiction of the accident site, hand drawn as a circled 'X' on an aviation Sectional chart. Highway designations have been changed as of 2006. The road section used for the forced landing, formerly called Georgia State Route 92 Spur, is now called Dallas-Acworth Highway (Georgia State Route 381).5 The small Georgia community of New Hope, in Paulding County, where a memorial/reunion was held by survivors and family members 20 years after the accident in 1997,67 still appears on maps as of 2006.8. The site is 11 miles from Cartersville Airport and 15.5 miles from Dobbins AFB. Cornelius Moore Field, between Cedartown and Rockmart, was about 20.5 miles behind them at the time of the crash. See also
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