Summer was in full swing in late July of 1973, a day when, some Missourians would later note, the skies looked ominous, as thunderstorms approached St. Louis. By the end of the day, all eyes would be on the latest news – a horrific, deadly plane crash that took the lives of nearly all on board. Thirty-eight passengers perished that late July day while six, including the pilot and co-pilot, survived.

Ozark Air Lines Flight 809 left Nashville, Tennessee, en route to St. Louis Lambert International Airport, on July 23, 1973.

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Forty-one passengers and three crew members were on the flight, piloted by Arvid Linke, headed to Missouri.

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Along the way, the Fairchild-Hiller twin-turboprop stopped briefly at three smaller airports, with passengers boarding in Marion, Illinois, the final stop.

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As Flight 809 approached St. Louis, visibility decreased. With thunderstorms surrounding Lambert International Airport, passengers experienced turbulence. The pilots also reported a problem with one of the fuel pumps.

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Air traffic control warned Flight 809 about the thunderstorms at the airport. But, the aircraft clipped a home then crashed into a hillside, nearly three miles from the runway.

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Thirty-eight passengers perished in the crash, two of them dying in the hospital. The pilot and co-pilot were among the survivors.

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The National Safety Transportation Board would later find that the plane was flying at a low altitude when it faced a “strong downdraft.”

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The NTSB also laid blame with the National Weather Service for not issuing a severe weather alert, the pilots for not realizing the danger the thunderstorm posed, and Ozark Air Lines for not providing flight rules for pilots with regards to thunderstorms near airports.

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Do you remember the Ozark Airlines Flight 809 plane crash in Missouri? Join the conversation in the comments. Then, click here to read about one of Missouri’s worst disasters.

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