This is a list of aviation-related events from 1947:
- The United States' inventory of atomic bombs reaches a total of 13 weapons during the year.[1]
January
- January 7 – Pioneering aviator Helen Richey is found dead at the age of 37 in her New York City apartment, apparently having committed suicide with an overdose of sleeping pills.[2]
- January 8
- January 11 – The BOAC Douglas C-47A G-AGJX crashes into a hill at Stowting in southeast England, killing eight of the 16 people on board and injuring all eight survivors. Among the injured is Member of Parliament Tom Horabin.
- January 14
- The United States replaces the national insignia for its military aircraft adopted in September 1943 with a new marking consisting of a white star centered in a blue circle flanked by white rectangles bisected by a horizontal red stripe, with the entire insignia outlined in blue , which is still in use in the 21st century.[4]
- The U.S. Joint Intelligence Staff estimates that in the event of a war the Soviet Union could mobilize 15,000 combat aircraft.[3]
- January 16 – The Burmese Air Force is founded.
- January 17 – The U.S. Joint Intelligence Committee notes that the Soviet Union maintains a peacetime deployment of 5,000 combat aircraft in Europe.[3]
- January 25
- January 26 – A KLM Douglas DC-3 Dakota crashes after take-off from Copenhagen, Denmark, killing all 22 on board, including Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten of Sweden, and American operatic soprano and musical theater and film actress Grace Moore.[5]
- January 30 – Transcontinental and Western Air inaugurates history's first regularly scheduled all-cargo air service to operate over the North Atlantic Ocean.[6]
May
- The Royal Navy forms its first all-helicopter squadron, No. 705 Squadron, which serves as the Fleet Air Arm's Helicopter Fleet Requirements Unit at Gosport.[12]
- May 1 – United Airlines begins daily scheduled service between San Francisco and Honolulu.[11]
- May 2 – Swissair attempts its first flight to New York City, flying a Douglas DC-4 from Switzerland via Shannon Airport in Ireland and Stephenville in the Dominion of Newfoundland. Fog at New York City's LaGuardia Airport forces the airliner to divert to Washington, D.C., where it arrives 20 hours 55 minutes after departing Switzerland.
- May 15 – The U.S. Joint War Planning Committee reports that the Soviet Air Force has 13,100 combat aircraft and that the Soviet satellite states have another 3,309, and that a month after the beginning of mobilization this could increase to 20,000 Soviet and 3,359 satellite state aircraft. It estimates that in an offensive in central Europe, the Soviet Union would employ 7,000 attack aircraft[13]
- May 17 – Flying Eastern Airlines' first Lockheed L-749 Constellation on its delivery flight, Eastern pilot Dick Miller sets a new record time for a flight from Burbank, California, to Miami, Florida, of 6 hours, 54 minutes, 57 seconds.[14]
- May 18
- May 28 – British South American Airways conducts trials of non-stop flights from London to Bermuda using aerial refueling over the Azores.
- May 29
- A United States Army Air Forces Douglas C-54D Skymaster crashes on approach to Naval Air Station Atsugi, Japan, at the end of a flight from Kimpo Airport in Seoul, South Korea, killing all 41 people on board. It is the worst aviation accident in Japanese history at the time.[17]
- A Flugfélag Islands Douglas C-47A-25-DK on a domestic flight in Iceland from Reykjavík Airport in Reykjavík to Akureyri Airport in Akureyri flies into the side of Hestfjall Mountain at the side of Hédinsfjördur, killing all 25 people on board. The wreckage is found the following day.[18]
- The Douglas DC-4 Mainliner Lake Tahoe, operating as United Airlines Flight 521, fails to become airborne while attempting to take off from LaGuardia Airport in New York City, runs off the end of the runway, and slams into an embankment, killing 42 of the 48 people on board. It is the worst aviation disaster in American history at the time, although the death toll will be exceeded in a crash the following day.
- May 30 – During a flight from Newark, New Jersey, to Florida, an Eastern Air Lines DC-4 disintegrates in flight at an altitude of 6,000 feet (1,800 m) and crashes into a swamp near Baltimore, Maryland, killing all 53 people on board. It replaces the previous day's United Airlines crash as the deadliest airline accident in American history. Among the dead are two relatives of a man who had died the previous day in the United crash. The 97 deaths in the two crashes exceed the entire commercial aviation death toll in the United States for 1946.[19]
June
- June 4 – Orient Airways, the first and only Muslim-owned airline in the British Raj, begins flight operations.
- June 17 – Pan American World Airways inaugurates what are considered the world's first scheduled commercial round-the-world flights, although the service actually operates between New York City and San Francisco without crossing the continental United States. Flight One, operated by a Douglas DC-4, departs San Francisco and stops at Honolulu, Hawaii; Midway Atoll; Wake Island; Guam; Manila, the Philippines; Bangkok; and Calcutta, where it meets Flight Two, a Lockheed Constellation that had flown from LaGuardia Airport in New York City. In Calcutta, the two aircraft swap flight designations; the DC-4 then turns back and continues as Flight Two to San Francisco, while the Constellation turns back and continues as Flight One, stopping at Karachi; Istanbul; London; Shannon, Ireland; and Gander, Newfoundland before arriving at LaGuardia Airport.[citation needed]
- June 19
- Pan American Airways Flight 121, the Lockheed L-049 Constellation Clipper Eclipse (registration NC88845) carrying 36 people on a flight from Karachi Airport in Karachi, British India, to Istanbul-Yesilköy Airport in Istanbul, Turkey, feathers its number one propeller due to engine problems, then suffers overheating in its other three engines. As it descends, the number two engine nacelle catches fire and the engine detaches from the airliner, which makes a belly landing near Mayadin, Syria. Fourteen of the people on board die; it is the worst aviation accident in Syrian history at the time.[20] Future Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry is among the survivors.[citation needed]
- United States Army Air Forces Colonel Albert Boyd sets a new official world airspeed record of 623.62 mph (1,003.62 km/h) in a Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star.[21] (This is still marginally slower than unofficial German speed records in rocket-powered aircraft during World War II).
- June 22 – At the Wilson-King Sky Show in St. George, Utah, a light plane involved in the air show experiences brake failure on landing and crashes into cars parked at the edge of the airfield, killing a teenaged girl. The pilot and the dead girl's mother and infant sister are injured.[22]
- June 24 – Kenneth Arnold UFO sighting: American businessman and aviator Kenneth Arnold is piloting a CallAir A-2 at about 9,200 feet (2,800 m) near Mineral, Washington (near Mount Rainier) when he sights what he reports to be a group of disc-like unidentified flying objects flying in a chain which he clocks at a minimum of 1,200 mph (1,900 km/h). He refers to them as looking like saucers, leading the press to coin the term "flying saucer," which soon enters everyday speech.
- June 30 – The Evaluation Board for Operation Crossroads submits its final report on the July 1946 atomic bomb tests at Bikini Atoll. It finds that an atomic attack could go beyond stopping a country's military effort and in addition wreck its economic and social structure for lengthy periods, and could even depopulate large portions of the earth's surface, threaten the existence of civilization, and cause the extinction of mankind. It recommends that the United States develop a large inventory of atomic weapons and the means to deliver them promptly and be prepared to strike first, with legal authority to launch a massive atomic strike to preempt a foreign strike if there are indications that an adversary is preparing one.[3]
July
- July 3
- July 13 – A Burke Air Transport Douglas DC-3C (registration NC79024) operating a non-scheduled passenger flight from Daniel Field in Augusta, Georgia, to Miami International Airport in Miami, Florida, begins a gradual descent after suffering engine trouble, culminating in a crash-landing among trees and stumps outside of Melbourne, Florida. Fourteen of the 36 people on board die.[24]
- July 15 – Northwest Airlines launches the first commercial passenger service from the U.S. to Asia's Far East along the North Pacific route with Douglas DC-4 The Manila, linking Minneapolis/St. Paul (USA) and Tokyo (Japan), Shanghai (China) and Manila (Philippines) by way of Edmonton (Canada) (technical stop), Anchorage (Alaska USA) and Shemya (USA) (technical stop). The Northwest Seattle—Anchorage service offered a connection (at Anchorage) with this new operation to the Orient. Seoul (South Korea) was included as a stop on the Northwest Airlines route to the Orient in August 1947.
- July 21 – An Argentine Air Force Douglas C-54A-1-DO Skymaster attempting to join a 200-plane flyover of Buenos Aires as part of a celebration of the birth of José de San Martín fails to gain altitude during takeoff from El Palomar Airport in El Palomar, Argentina. It runs through a crowd of spectators, crosses a railroad, and catches fire, killing 14 of the 19 people in board the aircraft and three people on the ground.[25]
- July 26 – President of the United States Harry S. Truman signs the National Security Act of 1947, creating the United States Department of Defense. Among its many provisions is one which states that the soon-to-be established United States Air Force "shall include aviation forces both combat and service not otherwise assigned." This wording allows the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps to retain their aviation forces upon the establishment of the independent Air Force in September 1947.[26]
- July 29 – In the Netherlands East Indies, the three surviving aircraft of the Indonesian Air Force bomb Dutch forces at Ambarawa, Salatiga, and Semarang, disproving the Dutch claim of having destroyed the entire Indonesian Air Force.[27]
- July 31 – A Republic of China Air Force C-47 Skytrain crashes in China during a flight from Tihua to Lanzhou, killing all 26 people on board.[28]
August
- Bad weather forces a U.S. Marine Corps pilot down in communist-controlled territory near Qingdao, China, during the Chinese Civil War. A landing party of U.S. Marines and U.S. Navy sailors destroys his plane to prevent its capture but fails to retrieve him, and the Chinese Communists return him to U.S. custody only after lengthy negotiations.[29]
- August 2 – BSAA Star Dust accident: The British South American Airways Avro Lancastrian Star Dust (tail number G-AGWH) disappears over the Andes during a flight from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Santiago, Chile, with the loss of all 11 people on board. Its wreckage finally will be discovered in glacial ice on Argentina's Tupungato mountain in 1998.
- August 3 – A Tushino air parade in Moscow in the Soviet Union presents the newest Soviet jets including the Yakovlev Yak-19, Lavochkin La-150, Lavochkin La-156, Lavochkin La-160, Sukhoi Su-9, and Sukhoi Su-11, among others. The Tupolev Tu-4 heavy bomber – a reverse-engineered copy of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress – also makes its first appearance, making Western analysts aware of its existence for the first time.
- August 4 – In an assessment of the defense of the Iberian Peninsula from Soviet invasion if Soviet forces reached the Pyrenees, the U.S. Joint Warfare Planning Committee reports that the Spanish Air Force has only 330 combat aircraft, all obsolete, and that the Portuguese Air Force is small and also obsolete, and that they would face about 1,000 Soviet aircraft. It finds that a defense of the peninsula at the Pyrenees would require the deployment of 739 ground-based combat aircraft and nine aircraft carriers to the area.[30]
- August 5 – A wheel-well stowaway inside a KLM piston aircraft survives a flight from Lisbon, Portugal to Natal, Brazil.[31]
- August 6 – A United States Navy PBY-5A Catalina amphibious flying boat carrying an Army-Navy American football team disappears during a flight from Kodiak, Alaska, to Dutch Harbor, Alaska. No wreckage or any sign of the 20 people on board is ever found.[32]
- August 9 – Douglas Aircraft ceases production of the Douglas DC-4.
- August 10 – British European Airways (BEA) begins the world's first regular cargo-only airline service.
- August 15
- August 20 – Flying the Douglas D-558-1 Skystreak, U.S. Navy Commander Turner F. Caldwell sets a new world air speed record of 640.796 mph (1,031.261 km/h) over Muroc, California, the first aircraft ever officially to exceed Heini Dittmar's October 2, 1941, unofficial record of 624 mph (1,004 km/h), set in a Messerschmitt Me 163A rocket fighter prototype.[33]
- August 23
- August 25 – Flying the Douglas Skystreak, United States Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Marion Carl achieves another world air speed record, reaching 650 mph (1,050 km/h).
- August 28 – The Norwegian Air Lines Short S.25 Sandringham 6 flying boat Kvitbjørn crashes into Kvammentinden mountain near Lødingen in Vesterålen, Norway, killing all 35 people on board. It is the deadliest aviation accident in Norwegian history at the time.[36]
- August 29 – The U.S. Joint Warfare Planning Committee reports that in East Asia as of July 1 the Soviet Union has about 2,200 aircraft, increasing to 3,000 by 135 days after the start of war, opposed by 978 aircraft of the U.S. Army Air Forces in East Asia and the Territory of Alaska, 212 British and British Empire aircraft in the theater of war, and 480 operational Republic of China Air Force aircraft.[37]
September
- September 6 – In an early test of the feasibility of fielding naval strategic missiles, the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Midway (CV-41) launches a V-2 rocket off her flight deck while steaming in the Atlantic Ocean off Bermuda.[38]
- September 17 – The United States Army Air Forces are separated from the United States Army and become an independent armed service, the United States Air Force.
- September 18 – The United States Department of the Air Force is created, and W. Stuart Symington becomes the first United States Secretary of the Air Force.[39]
- September 19 – A United States Air Force Douglas C-54D-5-DC Skymaster crashes at Rio de Ocono, Peru, after an in-flight fire during a flight from El Alto Airport in La Paz, Bolivia, to Limatambo Airport in Lima, Peru, killing all 14 people on board.[40]
- September 23 – The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff recommend that the United States Government pass legislation authorizing the United States Armed Forces to launch an atomic attack on the Soviet Union if one is required to prevent a Soviet atomic attack on the United States.[41]
- September 24 – Cyprus Airways is founded. The flag carrier of Cyprus, it will begin flight operations in April 1948.
- September 26 – General Carl A. Spaatz becomes the first Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force.[39]
- September 30 – The U.S. Joint Warfare Planning Committee reports that the Soviet Union lacks a strategic air force and poses no threat to the United States or Canada. It finds that the Soviets have about 100 heavy bombers that could reach Greenland and the Azores if Soviet ground forces captured forward bases for them in Norway and Spain, and about 100 medium bombers capable of striking Bear Island, Spitsbergen, Jan Mayen, Iceland, and the Faeroe Islands.[42]
October
- The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) becomes an agency of the United Nations linked to the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).[10]
- The U.S. Joint Intelligence Committee predicts that the Soviet Union probably will have atomic bombs by 1951 or 1952, and that the major target for such weapons would be American atomic bomb plants and major American cities.[3]
- October 1
- October 8 – A modified de Havilland Mosquito launches an expendable, unmanned, rocket-powered 30-percent-scale model of the cancelled British Miles M.52 supersonic research aircraft at high altitude, planning for it to reach Mach 1.3 70 seconds after launch, but the model explodes just after launch. A second flight will take place in October 1948 and will be successful.
- October 14 – U.S. Air Force Captain Chuck Yeager takes the rocket-powered Bell X-1 past the speed of sound in the first controlled, supersonic, level flight. The flight, which achieves Mach 1.06, sets a new world air speed record of 807.2 mph (1,299.1 km/h). A few days later, the same aircraft sets a new world altitude record, reaching 21,372 meters (70,118 feet).[43]
- October 16 – A Société Aérienne du Littoral Bristol Type 170 Freighter I (registration F-BCJN) flying from Marseille–Marignane Airport outside Marseille, France, to Oran Es Sénia Airport outside Es Sénia, French Algeria, crashes into the Mediterranean Sea off Cartagena, Spain, killing 41 of the 43 people on board.[44]
- October 24 – United Airlines Flight 608, a DC-6 (NC37510) en route to Chicago from Los Angeles, catches fire and crashes while attempting an emergency landing at the Bryce Canyon, Utah, airport, killing all 52 people aboard. American professional football player Jeff Burkett is among the dead.[5] It is the first crash of a DC-6 and the second-deadliest air crash in U.S. history at the time.
- October 26 – November 7 – Rhulin A. Thomas makes the first solo coast-to-coast flight by a deaf pilot. (Calbraith Perry Rodgers was an earlier deaf pilot who flew coast-to-coast in 1911, but was supported by a team on the ground.)
- October 28 – A Beechcraft Bonanza crashes in stormy weather southwest of Dog Lake in the Fremont National Forest near Bly, Oregon, killing all four people on board, including Governor of Oregon Earl Snell, Oregon Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell, Jr., and Oregon State Senate President Marshall E. Cornett.[5]
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