Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 9

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Trans-Canada_Air_Lines_Flight_9

On April 8, 1954 Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 9, a Canadair C-4 North Star four-engine commercial propliner on a domestic regular scheduled flight, collided in mid air with a Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) Harvard Mark II single engine military trainer on a cross-country navigation exercise over Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 9
rdf:langString Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 9
xsd:integer 62982460
xsd:integer 1076267205
xsd:integer 35
xsd:integer 1
xsd:date 1954-04-08
rdf:langString A Canadair C-4 North Star of Trans-Canada Air Lines similar to the accident aircraft
xsd:integer 4
xsd:integer 35
rdf:langString Trans Canada Airlines North Star Heathrow 1951.jpg
xsd:integer 31
xsd:integer 0
rdf:langString CF-TFW
rdf:langString A Noorduyn built Harvard Mk-II similar to the one involved in the accident
xsd:integer 1
xsd:integer 1
rdf:langString Noorduyn Harvard Mk-II PH-KLU.jpg
xsd:integer 0
xsd:integer 0
xsd:integer 1
xsd:integer 37
rdf:langString Accident
rdf:langString On April 8, 1954 Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 9, a Canadair C-4 North Star four-engine commercial propliner on a domestic regular scheduled flight, collided in mid air with a Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) Harvard Mark II single engine military trainer on a cross-country navigation exercise over Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. Both aircraft crashed, a large section of the C-4 North Star fell on a home in the suburbs of Moose Jaw and the Harvard came down on a golf course. All 35 people in the airliner were killed as was the lone occupant of the trainer and one person on the ground. Investigators later stated the most likely cause of the accident was the failure of both pilots to see and avoid each other.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8789

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