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Sabena Flight 548

Sabena Flight 548 was a Boeing 707-329[1] flight operated by Sabena that crashed en route from New York City to Brussels, Belgium, on February 15, 1961. The flight, which had originated at Idlewild International Airport,[2] crashed on approach to Brussels Airport, Brussels, killing all 72 people on board and one person on the ground.[3] The fatalities included the entire United States figure skating team, who were travelling to the World Figure Skating Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia.[4][5] The precise cause of the crash remains unknown; the most likely explanation was thought to be a failure of the mechanism that adjusted the tail stabilizer.[1]

Sabena Flight 548
A Sabena Boeing 707-329, similar to the aircraft involved in the accident
Accident
DateFebruary 15, 1961
SummaryLoss of control for undetermined reasons (possible mechanical failure)
SiteKampenhout, near Brussels Airport, Belgium
50°55′15″N 4°31′36″E / 50.9209°N 4.5268°E / 50.9209; 4.5268Coordinates: 50°55′15″N 4°31′36″E / 50.9209°N 4.5268°E / 50.9209; 4.5268
Total fatalities73
Total injuries1
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 707-329
OperatorSabena
RegistrationOO-SJB[1]
Flight originIdlewild Airport, New York
DestinationBrussels Airport, Zaventem
Occupants72
Passengers61
Crew11
Fatalities72
Survivors0
Ground casualties
Ground fatalities1
Ground injuries1
Memorial at the location of the crash

This was the first fatal accident involving a Boeing 707 in regular passenger service; it happened 28 months after the 707 airliner was placed into commercial use.[a] It remains the deadliest plane crash to occur on Belgian soil.[1]

Accident

There were eleven crew members on board the flight.[3] The two pilots, Louis Lambrechts and Jean Roy, were both ex-military pilots with 20+ years of flying experience.[6] There were no difficulties reported during the seven and a half hour trans-Atlantic flight from New York;[7] there was no indication that the plane was in any particular trouble, although the flight crew did lose radio contact with Brussels airport about twenty minutes before coming in to land.[8]

Under clear skies, at about 10:00 Brussels time (CET; 09:00 UTC),[9] the Boeing 707 was on a long approach to Runway 20 when, near the runway threshold and at a height of 900 feet (270 m), power was increased and the landing gear retracted.[5] The airplane had been forced to cancel its final approach to Brussels airport, as a small plane had not yet cleared the runway.[8] The 707 circled the airport and made another attempt to land on adjoining Runway 25, which was not operational;[6] this second approach was also aborted. It became clear to observers that the pilots were fighting for control of the aircraft, making a desperate attempt to land despite the fact that a mechanical malfunction was preventing them from making a normal landing.[6] The plane circled the airfield three times altogether,[7] during which the bank angle gradually increased until the aircraft had climbed to 1,500 feet (460 m) and was in a near vertical bank. It then leveled its wings, pitched up abruptly, lost speed and spiralled rapidly nose down,[5] plunging into the ground less than two miles (3 km) from the airport, at 10:05 CET (09:05 UTC).[1][7]

 
Crash site and debris

The location of the crash was a marshy area adjacent to farmland near Berg (then an independent municipality, nowadays part of Kampenhout), four miles northeast of Brussels.[6][9] Eyewitnesses said that the plane exploded when it hit the ground and heavy black smoke was seen coming from the wreckage which had burst into flames.[7] Theo de Laet, a young farmer and noted amateur cyclist, who was working in a field near to the crash site, was killed by a piece of aluminum shrapnel from the plane. Another field worker, Marcel Lauwers, was also hit by flying debris which amputated part of his leg.[6][10]

Father Joseph Cuyt, a local priest who had been observing the airplane as it came in to land, rushed to the scene but was driven back by the intense heat of the fire.[9] Airport rescue vehicles arrived at the crash site almost immediately but the plane was already a blazing fire.[6]

Baudouin I, King of the Belgians, and his consort, Queen Fabiola, travelled to the scene of the disaster[10] to provide comfort to the bereaved families. They donated oak coffins bearing the royal seal to transport the bodies back home.[5]

Loss of U.S. Figure Skating team

All eighteen members of the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating team lost their lives,[7] as well as sixteen other people who were accompanying them, including family members, professional coaches, and skating officials.[11] Among the fatalities were nine-times U.S. ladies' champion, turned coach, Maribel Vinson-Owen and her two daughters: reigning U.S. ladies' champion Laurence Owen, aged sixteen, and her 20-year-old sister, reigning U.S. pairs champion Maribel Owen,[7][12] both of whom had won gold medals at the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Colorado Springs just two weeks earlier. Laurence Owen was the cover story for the February 13 issue of Sports Illustrated,[13] just two days before her death.

Maribel Owen's pairs champion partner Dudley "Dud" Richards and reigning U.S. men's champion Bradley Lord were also killed, along with U.S. ice dance champions Diane "Dee Dee" Sherbloom and Larry Pierce. The team also lost U.S. men's silver medalist Gregory Kelley, U.S. ladies' silver medalist Stephanie "Steffi" Westerfeld, and U.S. ladies' bronze medalist Rhode Lee Michelson.[14]

Despite the fact that some national teams had already arrived in Prague for the World Championships—which were scheduled to start on February 22—the devastating loss of the U.S. team forced the event to be canceled.[11][15] The competition organizers in Prague initially confirmed that the event would go ahead,[16] but the International Skating Union (ISU) conducted a poll to agree on the most appropriate course of action;[7] the vote, which took place on February 16, went in favor of cancelation out of respect for the U.S. team.[15] A telegram was sent from ISU headquarters which read: "In view of the tragic death of 44 [sic] American skaters and officials the 1961 world championship will not be held."[16] Prague was given the chance to host the event the following year.

Aftermath

The figure skating team was mourned across the U.S. and all of the national newspapers carried the story on their front pages.[17]

In office for less than a month, President John F. Kennedy issued a statement of condolence from the White House, which read: "Our country has sustained a great loss of talent and grace which had brought pleasure to people all over the world. Mrs. Kennedy and I extend our deepest sympathy to the families and friends of all the passengers and crew who died in this crash."[17] He was particularly affected by the tragedy; pairs skater Dudley Richards was a personal friend of the president and his brother Ted, and they had spent summers together in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts.

The disaster struck a severe blow to the U.S. Figure Skating program, which had dominated the sport throughout the 1950s. Frank Shumway, who had only very recently become vice president of U.S. Figure Skating, predicted that it would take up to four years for the U.S. to regain its world prominence in the sport.[17]

Barbara Roles, the 1960 Olympic bronze medalist, felt obligated to come out of retirement, and won a gold medal at the 1962 U.S. Championships less than eight months after giving birth to her first child.[5] At the same time, some of the younger American figure skaters progressed more quickly due to the lack of senior skaters competing in the field. Scott Allen won a silver medal at the 1962 U.S. Championships when he was just twelve years old, and then won bronze at the 1964 Winter Olympics the week of his fifteenth birthday, becoming one of the youngest Olympic medalists in history.[5] It was not until 1965 that the U.S. started to win medals at the World Championships again;[15] and the U.S. did not regain international prominence in figure skating until the 1968 Winter Olympics when Peggy Fleming won gold in the ladies' event and Tim Wood won silver in the men's.

As the fatalities included many top American coaches as well as the skating team, the tragedy was also indirectly responsible for bringing foreign coaches to the U.S. to fill the vacuum that was left behind. U.S. Figure Skating team coach, William Kipp, who was one of those who died on the Brussels flight,[18] was eventually replaced by British former world champion pairs skater John Nicks in the fall of 1961. Italian world bronze medalist Carlo Fassi was another international coach who relocated from overseas to help rebuild the U.S. Figure Skating program.[5]

The disaster prompted U.S. Figure Skating executives to issue a mandate that still applies today: No team traveling to an international competition would ever be allowed to fly together again.[5]

Investigation

The Belgian Government immediately ordered a full inquiry into the cause of the accident,[3] and an investigation was conducted by the Belgian National authorities, the United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO),[6] who spent several months combing through the evidence. There was much speculation about what may have happened; the FBI even reportedly considered the possibility of terrorism.[5]

The exact cause of the crash was never fully determined, but the authorities eventually agreed that the most likely explanation was a mechanical failure of one of the flight control mechanisms,[5] probably a malfunction of either the wing spoilers or the tail stabilizers.[6] Although there was insufficient evidence to prove beyond reasonable doubt which of the flight systems had malfunctioned,[1] the FAA were of the opinion that the tail stabilizer-adjusting mechanism had failed, allowing the stabilizer to run to the "10.5deg nose-up position".[1]

Notable victims

There were 34 members of the U.S. Figure Skating delegation on board the fatal flight[5]—almost half the plane's occupants—all heading for the 1961 World Figure Skating Championships in Prague. The eighteen figure skaters were accompanied by six coaches, the team manager, two judges, one referee, and six family members. The notable victims are listed below.[14][19][20][21]

 
 
Graves of Stephanie Westerfeld and her sister Sharon in Evergreen Cemetery (Colorado Springs, Colorado); both were on board Sabena Flight 548.
Ladies
Men
  • Gregory Kelley (age 16), 1961 U.S. silver medalist, 1961 North American bronze medalist, 1960 World team member
  • Bradley Lord (age 21), 1961 U.S. champion, 1961 North American silver medalist, 1959 World team member
  • Douglas Ramsay (age 16), 1961 U.S. Championships fourth-place medalist
Pairs skaters
Ice dancers
Coaches
Judges
Others

Legacy

Within days of the tragedy, the U.S. Figure Skating Executive Committee established the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Memorial Fund, to honor the eighteen team members and their entourage who lost their lives on Sabena Flight 548.[22] The mission of the Memorial Fund was to help rebuild the U.S. Figure Skating program,[5] by providing financial support to promising young figure skaters to enable them to pursue their goals and develop their full potential.[6] In March 1961, a benefit was held in the Boston Garden arena to raise money for the Memorial Fund.[15] Over the years, thousands of young U.S. skaters have benefited from the fund which has continued to grow and prosper.[5][15] One of the first beneficiaries was 12-year-old Peggy Fleming, whose coach William Kipp had died in the plane crash. Fleming became a symbol of the rebirth of U.S. Figure Skating when she went on to win gold at the 1968 Winter Olympics.[23]

The 40th anniversary of the crash was marked by the unveiling of a five-foot-high (1.5 m) stone monument in Berg-Kampenhout,[10] close to the scene of the tragedy. Local dignitaries attended the unveiling ceremony which took place on February 10, 2001.[6]

In 2009, U.S. Figure Skating commissioned the production of a full-length feature documentary film called RISE, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the loss of the 1961 figure skating team.[24][25] The film was produced and directed by the Emmy Award winning company Lookalike Productions, of Englewood, New Jersey.[25] RISE was shown in theaters across the U.S. for one night only, on February 17, 2011, with one encore presentation on March 7, 2011.[24] Proceeds from the movie were donated to the U.S. Figure Skating Memorial Fund.[6][25] The film was shown on the Versus network on October 22, 2011.

In January 2011, the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating team were inducted into the U.S. Skating Hall of Fame in a special ceremony at the 2011 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Greensboro, North Carolina.[5] All eighteen team members were inducted, along with the six professional coaches that were accompanying them on the flight, Linda Hadley, William Kipp, Maribel Vinson-Owen, Daniel Ryan, Edi Scholdan, and William Swallender.[21]

Vinson-Owen Elementary School, in Winchester, Massachusetts, is named in honor of Maribel Vinson-Owen and her two daughters who died in the accident.[26] It ranks consistently among the top schools in Greater Boston.[15]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The first passenger flight of the Boeing 707 was in October 1958. Three 707s had crashed previously during training or test flights.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aviation Safety Database – Sabena Flight SN548 Accident Description". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  2. ^ "Jet Crash Wipes Out U.S. Skate Team". The Spokesman-Review. February 16, 1961. p. 20. Retrieved February 19, 2014.
  3. ^ a b c "The Brussels Tragedy". Flight Magazine (online FlightGlobal archive). February 24, 1961. Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  4. ^ "Air Crash Fatal to 73 Is Probed – Jet's Plunge Kills Skaters". The Spokesman-Review. February 16, 1961. p. 1. Retrieved February 19, 2014.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ford, Bonnie D. (2011). "Still Crystal Clear". ESPN. Retrieved February 19, 2014. The plane crash that killed the 1961 U.S. world championship figure skating team decimated families and the sport, but alongside grief came renewal.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Warnes, Kathy. "Light and Radiance: Figure Skater Laurence Owen and Her Team". historybecauseitshere.weebly.com. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "'Ice Queen,' 17 other U.S. skaters killed". United Press International. February 15, 1961. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  8. ^ a b Barron, Laignee (February 26, 2018). "In 1961 a Plane Crash Killed the Entire U.S. Figure Skating Team. Here's How the Tragic Legacy Lives On". Time. Retrieved September 13, 2018. Something must have been wrong in the cockpit: for the last 20 minutes of flight, Pilot Louis Lambrechts did not contact Brussels Airport. He made a wheels-down approach, but went round again, possibly because a Caravelle jet was taking off. (from Feb. 24, 1961 issue of Time)
  9. ^ a b c "Brussels Nightmare In Blazing Sunshine: 73 Die In Plane Crash". Montreal Gazette. February 16, 1961. p. 1.
  10. ^ a b c "Monument crash Sabena Boeing B707-329 OO-SJB". luchtvaarterfgoed.be (in Dutch). December 31, 2005. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
  11. ^ a b Armour, Nancy (February 10, 2011). "US skating program rose from ashes of '61 crash". USA Today. Associated Press.
  12. ^ Grimsby, Will (February 16, 1961). "Visions of Skating Crowns Vanish in Brussels Tragedy". The Spokesman-Review. Associated Press. p. 13.
  13. ^ Heilman, Barbara (February 13, 1961). "Mother Set the Style: Pretty Laurence Owen is the most exciting U.S. skater but in her remarkable family she is just another champion". Sports Illustrated: 39.
  14. ^ a b "Cream of US Skating Ranks Wiped Out In Air Crash". Montreal Gazette. Associated Press. February 16, 1961. p. 26.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Swift, E.M. (February 21, 2011). "The Day the Music Stopped". Sports Illustrated: 70–75.
  16. ^ a b "Skating Cancelled". Ottawa Citizen. Associated Press. February 16, 1961. p. 1.
  17. ^ a b c Soong, Kelyn (February 20, 2018). "The terrible plane crash that devastated U.S. figure skating – and still shapes it today". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
  18. ^ Kekis, John (November 14, 1995). "Still golden after all these years". The Free Lance–Star. Fredericksburg, Virginia. Associated Press. p. A7.
  19. ^ "List of Victims on Belgian Plane". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press. February 16, 1961. p. 23.
  20. ^ "World ended in fire for U.S. ice queen". Deseret News. UPI. February 15, 1961. p. 1A.
  21. ^ a b "U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame Members". World Figure Skating Museum & Hall of Fame. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
  22. ^ "The U.S. Figure Skating Memorial Fund". usfsa.org. February 15, 1961. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  23. ^ Lutz, Rachel (February 1, 2018). "1968: Peggy Fleming takes home only U.S. gold medal from Grenoble". nbcolympics.com. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
  24. ^ a b . Archived from the original on February 16, 2011. Retrieved January 17, 2011.
  25. ^ a b c "U.S. Figure Skating: RISE". usfsa.org. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
  26. ^ "Vinson-Owen Elementary School". Winchester Public Schools (Massachusetts). Retrieved September 9, 2018.

Further reading

  • Bushman, Patricia Shelley (2010). Indelible Tracings: The Story of the 1961 U.S. World Figure Skating Team. Stewart & Gray. ISBN 978-0-9846-0270-4.
  • Cornetta, Kat (February 15, 2021). "60 years later, the worst day in US figure skating history is remembered". The Boston Globe. Retrieved March 21, 2021.
  • Duffy, Bob (December 29, 2000). . The Boston Globe. p. E16. Archived from the original on February 23, 2010.
  • Nichols, Nikki (2006). Frozen in Time: The Enduring Legacy of the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Team (First ed.). Clerisy Press, Emmis Books. ISBN 978-1-57860-260-5.

External links

  • Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network
  • Final report – ICAO Circular 69-AN/61
  • Silent newsreel footage of the crash scene (1961) from British Pathé (Record No:68364) at YouTube
  • [Usurped!]
  • US Figure Skating Memorial Fund
  • RISE, a documentary movie about the 1961 team – will be shown in theaters in Feb 2011
  • Other incidents involving Sabena
  • Book about the crash
  • I Dream of Genealogy Memorial to Victims of Sabena Flight 548
  • the accident aircraft and captain


sabena, flight, boeing, flight, operated, sabena, that, crashed, route, from, york, city, brussels, belgium, february, 1961, flight, which, originated, idlewild, international, airport, crashed, approach, brussels, airport, brussels, killing, people, board, pe. Sabena Flight 548 was a Boeing 707 329 1 flight operated by Sabena that crashed en route from New York City to Brussels Belgium on February 15 1961 The flight which had originated at Idlewild International Airport 2 crashed on approach to Brussels Airport Brussels killing all 72 people on board and one person on the ground 3 The fatalities included the entire United States figure skating team who were travelling to the World Figure Skating Championships in Prague Czechoslovakia 4 5 The precise cause of the crash remains unknown the most likely explanation was thought to be a failure of the mechanism that adjusted the tail stabilizer 1 Sabena Flight 548A Sabena Boeing 707 329 similar to the aircraft involved in the accidentAccidentDateFebruary 15 1961SummaryLoss of control for undetermined reasons possible mechanical failure SiteKampenhout near Brussels Airport Belgium 50 55 15 N 4 31 36 E 50 9209 N 4 5268 E 50 9209 4 5268 Coordinates 50 55 15 N 4 31 36 E 50 9209 N 4 5268 E 50 9209 4 5268Total fatalities73Total injuries1AircraftAircraft typeBoeing 707 329OperatorSabenaRegistrationOO SJB 1 Flight originIdlewild Airport New YorkDestinationBrussels Airport ZaventemOccupants72Passengers61Crew11Fatalities72Survivors0Ground casualtiesGround fatalities1Ground injuries1Memorial at the location of the crash This was the first fatal accident involving a Boeing 707 in regular passenger service it happened 28 months after the 707 airliner was placed into commercial use a It remains the deadliest plane crash to occur on Belgian soil 1 Contents 1 Accident 2 Loss of U S Figure Skating team 3 Aftermath 4 Investigation 5 Notable victims 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksAccident EditThere were eleven crew members on board the flight 3 The two pilots Louis Lambrechts and Jean Roy were both ex military pilots with 20 years of flying experience 6 There were no difficulties reported during the seven and a half hour trans Atlantic flight from New York 7 there was no indication that the plane was in any particular trouble although the flight crew did lose radio contact with Brussels airport about twenty minutes before coming in to land 8 Under clear skies at about 10 00 Brussels time CET 09 00 UTC 9 the Boeing 707 was on a long approach to Runway 20 when near the runway threshold and at a height of 900 feet 270 m power was increased and the landing gear retracted 5 The airplane had been forced to cancel its final approach to Brussels airport as a small plane had not yet cleared the runway 8 The 707 circled the airport and made another attempt to land on adjoining Runway 25 which was not operational 6 this second approach was also aborted It became clear to observers that the pilots were fighting for control of the aircraft making a desperate attempt to land despite the fact that a mechanical malfunction was preventing them from making a normal landing 6 The plane circled the airfield three times altogether 7 during which the bank angle gradually increased until the aircraft had climbed to 1 500 feet 460 m and was in a near vertical bank It then leveled its wings pitched up abruptly lost speed and spiralled rapidly nose down 5 plunging into the ground less than two miles 3 km from the airport at 10 05 CET 09 05 UTC 1 7 Crash site and debris The location of the crash was a marshy area adjacent to farmland near Berg then an independent municipality nowadays part of Kampenhout four miles northeast of Brussels 6 9 Eyewitnesses said that the plane exploded when it hit the ground and heavy black smoke was seen coming from the wreckage which had burst into flames 7 Theo de Laet a young farmer and noted amateur cyclist who was working in a field near to the crash site was killed by a piece of aluminum shrapnel from the plane Another field worker Marcel Lauwers was also hit by flying debris which amputated part of his leg 6 10 Father Joseph Cuyt a local priest who had been observing the airplane as it came in to land rushed to the scene but was driven back by the intense heat of the fire 9 Airport rescue vehicles arrived at the crash site almost immediately but the plane was already a blazing fire 6 Baudouin I King of the Belgians and his consort Queen Fabiola travelled to the scene of the disaster 10 to provide comfort to the bereaved families They donated oak coffins bearing the royal seal to transport the bodies back home 5 Loss of U S Figure Skating team EditAll eighteen members of the 1961 U S Figure Skating team lost their lives 7 as well as sixteen other people who were accompanying them including family members professional coaches and skating officials 11 Among the fatalities were nine times U S ladies champion turned coach Maribel Vinson Owen and her two daughters reigning U S ladies champion Laurence Owen aged sixteen and her 20 year old sister reigning U S pairs champion Maribel Owen 7 12 both of whom had won gold medals at the 1961 U S Figure Skating Championships in Colorado Springs just two weeks earlier Laurence Owen was the cover story for the February 13 issue of Sports Illustrated 13 just two days before her death Maribel Owen s pairs champion partner Dudley Dud Richards and reigning U S men s champion Bradley Lord were also killed along with U S ice dance champions Diane Dee Dee Sherbloom and Larry Pierce The team also lost U S men s silver medalist Gregory Kelley U S ladies silver medalist Stephanie Steffi Westerfeld and U S ladies bronze medalist Rhode Lee Michelson 14 Despite the fact that some national teams had already arrived in Prague for the World Championships which were scheduled to start on February 22 the devastating loss of the U S team forced the event to be canceled 11 15 The competition organizers in Prague initially confirmed that the event would go ahead 16 but the International Skating Union ISU conducted a poll to agree on the most appropriate course of action 7 the vote which took place on February 16 went in favor of cancelation out of respect for the U S team 15 A telegram was sent from ISU headquarters which read In view of the tragic death of 44 sic American skaters and officials the 1961 world championship will not be held 16 Prague was given the chance to host the event the following year Aftermath EditThe figure skating team was mourned across the U S and all of the national newspapers carried the story on their front pages 17 In office for less than a month President John F Kennedy issued a statement of condolence from the White House which read Our country has sustained a great loss of talent and grace which had brought pleasure to people all over the world Mrs Kennedy and I extend our deepest sympathy to the families and friends of all the passengers and crew who died in this crash 17 He was particularly affected by the tragedy pairs skater Dudley Richards was a personal friend of the president and his brother Ted and they had spent summers together in Hyannis Port Massachusetts The disaster struck a severe blow to the U S Figure Skating program which had dominated the sport throughout the 1950s Frank Shumway who had only very recently become vice president of U S Figure Skating predicted that it would take up to four years for the U S to regain its world prominence in the sport 17 Barbara Roles the 1960 Olympic bronze medalist felt obligated to come out of retirement and won a gold medal at the 1962 U S Championships less than eight months after giving birth to her first child 5 At the same time some of the younger American figure skaters progressed more quickly due to the lack of senior skaters competing in the field Scott Allen won a silver medal at the 1962 U S Championships when he was just twelve years old and then won bronze at the 1964 Winter Olympics the week of his fifteenth birthday becoming one of the youngest Olympic medalists in history 5 It was not until 1965 that the U S started to win medals at the World Championships again 15 and the U S did not regain international prominence in figure skating until the 1968 Winter Olympics when Peggy Fleming won gold in the ladies event and Tim Wood won silver in the men s As the fatalities included many top American coaches as well as the skating team the tragedy was also indirectly responsible for bringing foreign coaches to the U S to fill the vacuum that was left behind U S Figure Skating team coach William Kipp who was one of those who died on the Brussels flight 18 was eventually replaced by British former world champion pairs skater John Nicks in the fall of 1961 Italian world bronze medalist Carlo Fassi was another international coach who relocated from overseas to help rebuild the U S Figure Skating program 5 The disaster prompted U S Figure Skating executives to issue a mandate that still applies today No team traveling to an international competition would ever be allowed to fly together again 5 Investigation EditThe Belgian Government immediately ordered a full inquiry into the cause of the accident 3 and an investigation was conducted by the Belgian National authorities the United States Federal Aviation Administration FAA and the International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO 6 who spent several months combing through the evidence There was much speculation about what may have happened the FBI even reportedly considered the possibility of terrorism 5 The exact cause of the crash was never fully determined but the authorities eventually agreed that the most likely explanation was a mechanical failure of one of the flight control mechanisms 5 probably a malfunction of either the wing spoilers or the tail stabilizers 6 Although there was insufficient evidence to prove beyond reasonable doubt which of the flight systems had malfunctioned 1 the FAA were of the opinion that the tail stabilizer adjusting mechanism had failed allowing the stabilizer to run to the 10 5deg nose up position 1 Notable victims EditThere were 34 members of the U S Figure Skating delegation on board the fatal flight 5 almost half the plane s occupants all heading for the 1961 World Figure Skating Championships in Prague The eighteen figure skaters were accompanied by six coaches the team manager two judges one referee and six family members The notable victims are listed below 14 19 20 21 Graves of Stephanie Westerfeld and her sister Sharon in Evergreen Cemetery Colorado Springs Colorado both were on board Sabena Flight 548 LadiesRhode Lee Michelson age 17 1961 U S bronze medalist Laurence Rochon Owen age 16 1961 U S and North American champion 1960 Olympic and World team member Stephanie Westerfeld age 17 1961 U S silver medalistMenGregory Kelley age 16 1961 U S silver medalist 1961 North American bronze medalist 1960 World team member Bradley Lord age 21 1961 U S champion 1961 North American silver medalist 1959 World team member Douglas Ramsay age 16 1961 U S Championships fourth place medalistPairs skatersIla Ray Hadley age 18 Ray Ellis Hadley Jr age 17 1960 Olympic and World team members 1961 U S pairs silver medalists Laurie Jean Hickox age 15 William Holmes Hickox age 19 1961 U S pairs bronze medalists Maribel Yerxa Owen age 20 Dudley Shaw Richards age 29 1960 Olympic team members 1961 U S pairs champions 1961 North American silver medalistsIce dancersDona Lee Carrier age 20 Roger Campbell age 19 1961 U S and North American silver medalists Patricia Major Dineen age 24 Robert Dineen age 23 1961 U S bronze medalists Diane Carol Sherbloom age 18 Larry Pierce age 24 1961 U S championsCoachesDaniel Ryan Eduard Scholdan Maribel Yerxa Vinson OwenJudgesHarold Hartshorne Edward LeMaireOthersU S team manager Deane McMinn Referee Walter S PowellLegacy EditWithin days of the tragedy the U S Figure Skating Executive Committee established the 1961 U S Figure Skating Memorial Fund to honor the eighteen team members and their entourage who lost their lives on Sabena Flight 548 22 The mission of the Memorial Fund was to help rebuild the U S Figure Skating program 5 by providing financial support to promising young figure skaters to enable them to pursue their goals and develop their full potential 6 In March 1961 a benefit was held in the Boston Garden arena to raise money for the Memorial Fund 15 Over the years thousands of young U S skaters have benefited from the fund which has continued to grow and prosper 5 15 One of the first beneficiaries was 12 year old Peggy Fleming whose coach William Kipp had died in the plane crash Fleming became a symbol of the rebirth of U S Figure Skating when she went on to win gold at the 1968 Winter Olympics 23 The 40th anniversary of the crash was marked by the unveiling of a five foot high 1 5 m stone monument in Berg Kampenhout 10 close to the scene of the tragedy Local dignitaries attended the unveiling ceremony which took place on February 10 2001 6 In 2009 U S Figure Skating commissioned the production of a full length feature documentary film called RISE to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the loss of the 1961 figure skating team 24 25 The film was produced and directed by the Emmy Award winning company Lookalike Productions of Englewood New Jersey 25 RISE was shown in theaters across the U S for one night only on February 17 2011 with one encore presentation on March 7 2011 24 Proceeds from the movie were donated to the U S Figure Skating Memorial Fund 6 25 The film was shown on the Versus network on October 22 2011 In January 2011 the 1961 U S Figure Skating team were inducted into the U S Skating Hall of Fame in a special ceremony at the 2011 U S Figure Skating Championships in Greensboro North Carolina 5 All eighteen team members were inducted along with the six professional coaches that were accompanying them on the flight Linda Hadley William Kipp Maribel Vinson Owen Daniel Ryan Edi Scholdan and William Swallender 21 Vinson Owen Elementary School in Winchester Massachusetts is named in honor of Maribel Vinson Owen and her two daughters who died in the accident 26 It ranks consistently among the top schools in Greater Boston 15 See also EditList of accidents involving sports teams American Airlines Flight 514 The first crash of a Boeing 707Notes Edit The first passenger flight of the Boeing 707 was in October 1958 Three 707s had crashed previously during training or test flights References Edit a b c d e f g Ranter Harro ASN Aviation Safety Database Sabena Flight SN548 Accident Description aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Retrieved September 27 2016 Jet Crash Wipes Out U S Skate Team The Spokesman Review February 16 1961 p 20 Retrieved February 19 2014 a b c The Brussels Tragedy Flight Magazine online FlightGlobal archive February 24 1961 Retrieved February 15 2011 Air Crash Fatal to 73 Is Probed Jet s Plunge Kills Skaters The Spokesman Review February 16 1961 p 1 Retrieved February 19 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ford Bonnie D 2011 Still Crystal Clear ESPN Retrieved February 19 2014 The plane crash that killed the 1961 U S world championship figure skating team decimated families and the sport but alongside grief came renewal a b c d e f g h i j k Warnes Kathy Light and Radiance Figure Skater Laurence Owen and Her Team historybecauseitshere weebly com Retrieved 29 August 2018 a b c d e f g Ice Queen 17 other U S skaters killed United Press International February 15 1961 Retrieved July 26 2018 a b Barron Laignee February 26 2018 In 1961 a Plane Crash Killed the Entire U S Figure Skating Team Here s How the Tragic Legacy Lives On Time Retrieved September 13 2018 Something must have been wrong in the cockpit for the last 20 minutes of flight Pilot Louis Lambrechts did not contact Brussels Airport He made a wheels down approach but went round again possibly because a Caravelle jet was taking off from Feb 24 1961 issue of Time a b c Brussels Nightmare In Blazing Sunshine 73 Die In Plane Crash Montreal Gazette February 16 1961 p 1 a b c Monument crash Sabena Boeing B707 329 OO SJB luchtvaarterfgoed be in Dutch December 31 2005 Retrieved September 12 2018 a b Armour Nancy February 10 2011 US skating program rose from ashes of 61 crash USA Today Associated Press Grimsby Will February 16 1961 Visions of Skating Crowns Vanish in Brussels Tragedy The Spokesman Review Associated Press p 13 Heilman Barbara February 13 1961 Mother Set the Style Pretty Laurence Owen is the most exciting U S skater but in her remarkable family she is just another champion Sports Illustrated 39 a b Cream of US Skating Ranks Wiped Out In Air Crash Montreal Gazette Associated Press February 16 1961 p 26 a b c d e f Swift E M February 21 2011 The Day the Music Stopped Sports Illustrated 70 75 a b Skating Cancelled Ottawa Citizen Associated Press February 16 1961 p 1 a b c Soong Kelyn February 20 2018 The terrible plane crash that devastated U S figure skating and still shapes it today The Washington Post Retrieved September 15 2018 Kekis John November 14 1995 Still golden after all these years The Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p A7 List of Victims on Belgian Plane Pittsburgh Post Gazette Associated Press February 16 1961 p 23 World ended in fire for U S ice queen Deseret News UPI February 15 1961 p 1A a b U S Figure Skating Hall of Fame Members World Figure Skating Museum amp Hall of Fame Retrieved September 12 2018 The U S Figure Skating Memorial Fund usfsa org February 15 1961 Retrieved September 12 2015 Lutz Rachel February 1 2018 1968 Peggy Fleming takes home only U S gold medal from Grenoble nbcolympics com Retrieved September 12 2018 a b RISE at the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival Archived from the original on February 16 2011 Retrieved January 17 2011 a b c U S Figure Skating RISE usfsa org Retrieved September 12 2018 Vinson Owen Elementary School Winchester Public Schools Massachusetts Retrieved September 9 2018 Further reading EditBushman Patricia Shelley 2010 Indelible Tracings The Story of the 1961 U S World Figure Skating Team Stewart amp Gray ISBN 978 0 9846 0270 4 Cornetta Kat February 15 2021 60 years later the worst day in US figure skating history is remembered The Boston Globe Retrieved March 21 2021 Duffy Bob December 29 2000 Shattered Dreams Potential for greatness of 18 skaters perished en route to Prague The Boston Globe p E16 Archived from the original on February 23 2010 Nichols Nikki 2006 Frozen in Time The Enduring Legacy of the 1961 U S Figure Skating Team First ed Clerisy Press Emmis Books ISBN 978 1 57860 260 5 External links EditAccident description at the Aviation Safety Network Final report ICAO Circular 69 AN 61 Silent newsreel footage of the crash scene 1961 from British Pathe Record No 68364 at YouTube Photo of the crash scene Usurped US Figure Skating Memorial Fund RISE a documentary movie about the 1961 team will be shown in theaters in Feb 2011 Other incidents involving Sabena Book about the crash I Dream of Genealogy Memorial to Victims of Sabena Flight 548 the accident aircraft and captain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sabena Flight 548 amp oldid 1133458176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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