Sabena Air Crash Site.

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SKIN052

Minister of Fire
Nov 12, 2008
798
Appleton, Newfoundland
This Belgian DC-4 went down outside of Gander back in 1946. 26 souls lost and buried on site, 18 survivors. This area even to this day is very hard to access, I could only imagine what they went through trying to get the survivors out of here. Apparently this was the first time a helicopter was ever used as a rescue vehicle. We turned this into a 200km ATV trip and still had to walk 2.5 km to the site, weather was horrible but we made it.

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Hallowed ground for sure. I'm sure it was a sombering moment, even though you had no connection to those lost souls from so long ago. Thanks for sharing......
 
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Yes the site was somewhat eerie to be honest. I was also very impressed with my 11 year old daughter. Very hard walk up a creek bed, you can see by the stains on her elbow that she feel, hard, got up shook it off and carried on. Trooper!!! Here is a photo of the monument on site.

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As a geocacher I have been to a few crash sites here in Maine.

Here is a F-101B Voodoo Interceptor that crashed near Ellsworth in 1961.

Photos are not my own, but are taken from the geocaching.com site.

voodoo4.jpgvoodoo1.jpgvoodoo2.jpgvoodoo3.jpg
 
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B-52 crash from January 24, 1963 on Elephant Mountain in Greenville. The bomber crashed when a vertical stabilizer broke. Seven died. The pilot survived with a broken foot and the navigator is one of the few, if any, men or women who have survived being ejected and landing without a parachute as the parachute failed to open and he landed in his ejection seat in 5 feet of snow. Both survivors spent the night on the mountain in temps that were at -30 degrees F before being rescued the next day. You can ride an ATV, snowmobile or drive your car fairly close to the crash site now . . . but this was not the case back in 1963.

Again, pics are not my own, but are from the geocaching site.B-52c.jpgB-52a.jpgB-52b.jpg
 
Great pics guys, happy to see other have interest in this stuff.
 
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