1969 in aviation

Years in aviation: 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Centuries: 19th century · 20th century · 21st century
Decades: 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
Years: 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
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This is a list of aviation-related events from 1969.

Events

  • The Canadian Snowbirds aerobatic team is formed.
  • A fifth annual Harmon Trophy is created to honor the world's outstanding astronaut of the year and is awarded for the first time, honoring the outstanding astronauts of 1968.
  • Interflug begins operation of the Tupolev Tu-134, its first jet airliner.

January

  • January 1 – Agrolet is renamed Slov-Air.
  • January 2
  • January 5 – The flight crew of Ariana Afghan Airlines Flight 701, a Boeing 727-113C, fails to extend the airliner's flaps while on approach to London Gatwick Airport in heavy fog. The plane crashes short of the runway, striking a house in Horley, Surrey, England, killing 48 of the 62 people on board and two people on the ground. All 14 survivors are injured, as is one person on the ground.
  • January 7 – A male passenger hijacks Avianca Flight 654, a Douglas DC-4 (registration HK-1028) making a domestic flight in Colombia from Riohacha to Maicao with 60 people on board, and demands that it fly him to Cuba. After a refueling stop at Barranquilla, Colombia, the airliner continues to Cuba, landing at Santiago de Cuba.[3]
  • January 9 – Saying he hates the United States, loves the Soviet Union, and is on the run from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, 21-year-old Ronald Bohle hijacks Eastern Airlines Flight 831, a Boeing 727 flying from Miami, Florida, to Nassau in the Bahamas with 79 people on board, and demands to be flown to Cuba. He holds a flight attendant hostage with a 7-inch (17.8-cm) switchblade until disembarking in Cuba, where he is imprisoned.[4][5]
  • January 11
  • January 13
    • With its cockpit crew so occupied with attempting to diagnose the lack of a nose gear green light that they inadvertently allow its rate of descent to increase while on approach to Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, the Scandinavian Airlines McDonnell Douglas DC-8-62 Sverre Viking, operating as Flight 933 with 45 people on board, crashes in Santa Monica Bay 6 miles (9.7 km) short of the runway and breaks into three pieces, two of which sink immediately. Fifteen people die, and 17 of the 30 survivors are injured.
    • Accompanied by his three-year-old son, Kenneth McPeek jams a sawed-off shotgun in the back of a flight attendant aboard Delta Air Lines Flight 297 – a Convair CV-880 flying from Detroit, Michigan, to Miami, Florida, with 77 people on board – and demands that it fly to Cuba. As the flight attendant informs the pilot of the hijacking, she closes the door to the cockpit, locking McPeek out. With McPeek not threatening anyone after that, the captain lands at Miami, where McPeek surrenders quietly.[9][10]
  • January 14
    • The United States Navy announces that the Grumman F-14 Tomcat has won the competition for a new long-range fleet air defense fighter.[11]
    • Off Hawaii, a MK-32 Zuni rocket loaded on a parked F-4 Phantom II aboard the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CVN-65) explodes after being overheated by an aircraft start unit mounted to a tow tractor.[12][13] The explosion sets off fires and additional explosions across the flight deck, killing 27 and injuring 314 men and knocking the ship out of action until 1 March.[14]
  • January 18 – United Airlines Flight 266, a Boeing 727-22C, crashes into Santa Monica Bay off the coast of California four minutes after takeoff from Los Angeles International Airport. All 38 people on board die.
  • January 19
    • A hijacker commandeers Eastern Airlines Flight 9, a Douglas DC-8 with 171 people on board flying from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City to Miami, Florida, and forces it to fly to Cuba.[15]
    • Ten hijackers take control of an Ecuatoriana Lockheed L-188 Electra during a domestic flight in Ecuador from Guayaquil to Quito, demanding to be flown to Cuba.[15]
  • January 22 – The U.S. 9th Marine Regiment begins Operation Dewey Canyon – an operation dependent completely on helicopters – in South Vietnam's Da Krong Valley. It will conclude on March 19, rated as the 9th Marines′ most successful operation of the Vietnam War.[16]
  • January 24 – A hijacker commandeers National Airlines Flight 424, a Boeing 727 flying from Key West, Florida, to New York City with 47 people on board, and forces it to fly to Cuba.[17]
  • January 28
    • Armed with a .38-caliber revolver and what they claim is dynamite, prison escapees Bryon Vaughn Booth and Clinton Robert Smith hijack National Airlines Flight 64 – a Douglas Super DC-8 flying from New Orleans, Louisiana, to Miami, Florida, with 32 people on board – and force it to fly to Havana, Cuba, where Cuban authorities arrest and imprison them.[18][19]
    • Armed with a single revolver, Everett White, Noble Mason, and Larry Brooks hijack Eastern Airlines Flight 121 – a Douglas DC-8 flying from Atlanta, Georgia, to Miami, Florida, with 113 people on board – and force it to fly to Cuba. To prevent panic, the captain does not inform the passengers that the airliner is diverting to Cuba.[20][21]
  • January 31 – A hijacker commandeers National Airlines Flight 44, a Douglas DC-8 flying from San Francisco, California, to Tampa, Florida, with 63 people on board, and forces it to fly to Cuba.[22]

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

  • The United States Air Force flies its last Douglas AC-47 Spooky fixed-wing gunship mission of the Vietnam War. South Vietnam's Republic of Vietnam Air Force and Laos's Royal Lao Air Force fly all future AC-47 missions during the Southeast Asian conflict.[76]
  • December 2 – A hijacker commandeers Trans World Airlines Flight 54, a Boeing 707 with 28 people on board flying from San Francisco, California, to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and forces it to fly to Cuba.[118]
  • December 3 – Trans World Airlines opens the Breech Academy – also called the Breech Training Academy – in Overland Park, Kansas, for the training of flight attendants, ticket agents, and pilots.[77]
  • December 4 – The Tokyo Convention – officially the "Convention on Offences and Certain Other Acts Committed on Board Aircraft" – goes into effect. It establishes that at least one state, specifically the one in which the aircraft is registered, will take jurisdiction over the suspect in the event of an in-flight criminal offense that jeopardizes the safety of an aircraft or people on an aircraft during international air navigation or an intention to commit such an offense, and it provides for situations in which other states may also have jurisdiction. It also recognizes certain powers and immunities of the pilot in command, who on international flights may restrain any person or persons he or she has reasonable cause to believe is committing or is about to commit an offense liable to interfere with the safety of persons or property on board the aircraft or who is jeopardizing good order and discipline aboard the aircraft, the first time this has been recognized in international aviation law.
  • December 9 – An Egyptian Air Force MiG-21 (NATO reporting name "Fishbed") shoots down an Israeli Air Force F-4 Phantom II for the first time.[119]
  • December 11 – A North Korean agent hijacks a Korean Air Lines NAMC YS-11 with 50 other people on board and forces it to fly to Sǒndǒk Airfield near Wonsan, North Korea. North Korea returns 39 of the passengers to South Korea 66 days later, but never returns the crew of four or the other seven passengers, which is viewed in South Korea as an example of North Korean abductions of South Koreans.
  • December 12 – Thirty minutes after an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 707 takes off from Madrid, Spain, bound for Athens, Greece, Eritrean Liberation Front member Hamed Shenen gets up from his seat with a handgun and orders the flight crew to fly the plane to Aden in South Yemen. The pilot explains that the plane will have to refuel at Rome, but does not receive permission to land there, and a plainclothes security guard then enters the cockpit and shoots Shenen, after which a second security guard shoots Shenen six more times, killing him. Shenen's accomplice Mahmoud Suliman rushes toward the cockpit armed with a knife, and the security guards shoot him to death as well. It is the first time that aircraft hijackers have been killed aboard a plane in flight. The plane's 15 passengers celebrate the hijackers′ deaths by drinking champagne, and the airliner lands safely in Athens. The Eritrean Liberation Front claims responsibility for the hijacking, saying that the hijackers merely intended to hand out propaganda leaflets to the passengers.[39][120][121]
  • December 18 – The England-Australia Commemorative Air Race is flown in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Smith brothers'[who?] flight. It is won by W. J. Bright and F. L. Buxton in a Britten-Norman Islander.[citation needed]
  • December 19 – A hijacker commandeers a LAN Chile Boeing 727-116 with 96 people on board making a domestic fight in Chile from Santiago to Arica and forces it to fly to Havana, Cuba.[122]
  • December 20 – The highest-scoring North Vietnamese ace of the Vietnam War, Nguyễn Văn Cốc, scores his final victory, claimed as over an AQM-34 Firebee unmanned aerial vehicle but possibly over an OV-10 Bronco. The North Vietnamese Air Force credits him with nine victories, while the United States confirms seven.
  • December 21 – Three members of the People's Front for the Liberation of Palestine are caught trying to board a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707 at Athens, Greece, for a flight to Rome and New York City with guns and dynamite in their hand luggage. They had planned to hijack the airliner, divert it to Tunis in Tunisia, and blow it up to protest the support of the United States for Israel.[39]
  • December 22 – An explosion in the lavatory of an Air Vietnam Douglas DC-6B in mid-flight damages the braking system. When the aircraft lands at Nha Trang Airport in Nha Trang, South Vietnam, it goes off the end of the runway and strikes a concrete pylon, dwellings, and a school, killing 10 of the 77 people on board and 24 people on the ground, and injuring many more.[123][124]
  • December 23 – A hijacker takes control of a LACSA Curtiss C-46 Commando during a domestic flight in Costa Rica from Puerto Limón to San José and forces it to fly to San Andreas, Cuba.[118]
  • December 26 – A hijacker commandeers United Airlines Flight 929, a Boeing 727 with 32 people on board flying from New York City to Chicago, Illinois, and forces it to fly to Cuba.[125]

First flights

January

  • January 3 – SOCATA ST 60[126]

February

  • February 9 – Boeing 747[126]
  • February 12 – Mil Mi V-12

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

  • Antonov An-14M, prototype of the Antonov An-28 ("Cash")[132]
  • September 15 – Cessna FanJet500, the prototype which led to the Cessna Citation.
  • September 19 – Mil Mi-24, the most widely exported helicopter gunship.

Entered service

March

May

August

October

Retirements

February

Deadliest crash

The deadliest crash of this year was Viasa Flight 742, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9 which crashed shortly after takeoff from Maracaibo, Venezuela on 16 March, killing all 84 people on board, as well as 71 on the ground. This was the deadliest civil accident in the 1960s decade, and was at the time the world's deadliest civil aviation disaster.

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  • Vlad, Danut (March–April 1997). "Out of the Ashes: The Romanian Aircraft Industry Since 1945". Air Enthusiast. No. 74. pp. 9–19.
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