Template:Short description Template:Yearbox Template:Portal This is a list of aviation-related events from 1968.

EventsEdit

JanuaryEdit

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FebruaryEdit

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  • February 10 – .50-caliber (12.7-mm) machine gun fire hits a U.S. Marine Corps KC-130F Hercules carrying a cargo of flamethrowers and rubber bladders filled with jet fuel while it is on final approach to Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, setting one of the fuel bladders and one of its engines on fire. The pilot lands the plane at Khe Sanh, but the rubber bladders explodes into flames after the plane touches down, killing eight of the 11 people on board.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • February 17 – Deciding that he is a Communist who hates the United States, 31-year-old Thomas Boynton charters a Piper Apache to fly him from Marathon to Miami, Florida, then points a gun at the pilot's head shortly after takeoff and orders him to fly to Havana, Cuba, instead. Boynton requests political asylum upon arrival in Havana, but Cuban authorities arrest him and he will spend 20 months in Cuba, mostly in jail. He will be allowed to travel to Canada in October 1969 and will return to the United States in November 1969.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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MarchEdit

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  • March 6 – After a Republic of Vietnam Air Force C-123K Provider carrying troops and spare parts aborts its approach to Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, because of a light plane on the runway and circles for another approach, ground fire shoots it down. The C-123K spirals into the ground, killing all 49 people on board.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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AprilEdit

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MayEdit

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JuneEdit

  • The 101st Airborne Division is redesignated as the U.S. ArmyTemplate:'s second airmobile division and renamed the 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile). Its conversion into an airmobile division will not be complete for a year.<ref>Chinnery, Philip D., Vietnam: The Helicopter War, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1991, Template:ISBN, p. 116.</ref>
  • June 5 – North Vietnam demands an unconditional end to American bombing of its territory.<ref name="annapolis157"/>
  • June 12 – After the flight crew of Pan Am Flight 1, the Boeing 707-321C Clipper Caribbean (registration N798PA), misunderstands the barometric pressure sent to them by air traffic control while on approach to Dum Dum Airport in Calcutta, India, and sets their instruments to the wrong pressure, giving them false altitude readings, the airliner descends too quickly, strikes a tree, and crashes Template:Convert short of the runway. The crash results in a hull loss of the aircraft and kills six of the 63 people on board.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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JulyEdit

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    • Homesick for his native Cuba since arriving in the United States in July 1967, Mario Velazquez uses a .38-caliber revolver he smuggled aboard in a milk carton to hijack Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 714 – a Boeing 727-051 (registration N475US) with 92 people on board – as it descends toward Miami, Florida, at the end of a flight from Chicago, Illinois, demanding to be flown to Cuba. Escorted by United States Air Force fighters – unknown to its flight crew, because the fighters never make visual or radio contact with the airliner – the plane lands at José Martí International Airport in Havana, Cuba, becoming the first Boeing 727 ever to land in Cuba. Cuban soldiers board the airliner and arrest Velazquez. Cuban authorities allow the Boeing 727 and its crew to return to the United States on the morning of July 2, but require the passengers to transfer by bus to Varadero Airport in Varadero, Cuba, where they board an Airlift International Douglas DC-7C without enough seats for all them for the flight back to the United States, and they arrive at Miami early on the afternoon of July 2.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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    • As an Island City Flying Service Cessna 210 flies from Key West to Miami, Florida, 33-year-old Leonard Bendicks pulls out a gun and forces it to fly to Havana, Cuba, where he is arrested. He gives no reason for the hijacking. Cuba will deport him to Canada in September 1969, and shortly afterward he will be arrested in the United States.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • July 13 – A Sabena Boeing 707 cargo aircraft (registration OO-SJK) strikes trees and crashes on approach to Lagos Airport in Nigeria, killing all seven people on board.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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AugustEdit

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  • August 4 – Absent without leave from the United States Army, 27-year-old Willis Jessie kidnaps his two-year-old daughter from his ex-wife and hires a Cessna 172 to take the two of them on a sightseeing flight over Naples, Florida. Once the plane is airborne, he pulls out a pistol and orders the pilot to fly to Havana, Cuba. Jessie is imprisoned after arriving in Havana, and his daughter is placed in a foster home. They both will return to the United States in January 1969.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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SeptemberEdit

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OctoberEdit

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  • October 16 - E-2A Lost at sea while attempting a night landing on the deck of the USS Forrestal. Two crew recovered, three lost.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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    • A Beechcraft Queen Air is believed to have crashed in Lake Superior near the Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan, with three aboard. They were gathering water temperature and other data for the National Center for Atmospheric Research. A lake bed sonar search for the crash site began in September, 2024.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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NovemberEdit

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  • November 4 – After changing from business attire into the clothing favored by the Black Panther Party in a lavatory shortly after takeoff aboard National Airlines Flight 186 – a Boeing 727 with 65 people on board flying from New Orleans, Louisiana, to Miami, Florida – Raymond Johnson uses a .38-caliber revolver to hijack the airliner. He identifies himself as a "black nationalist freedom fighter" and demands that the plane fly to Havana, Cuba. During the flight, Johnson announces that he has renamed the plane Republic of New Africa, and he robs the passengers of $405, which he says will be a donation for "the revolution," and he forces the flight attendants to count the money on the cabin floor. After the plane lands in Havana, Cuban authorities arrest Johnson and return the stolen money to National Airlines. In 1986, Johnson will return to the United States, saying that he was a fool to have hijacked the airliner.<ref name="skyjack"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • November 6 – As Philippine Air Lines Flight 158A, a Fokker F27 with 43 people on board flying from Cebu to Manila in the Philippines, begins its descent to Manila, four armed passengers enter the cockpit and hijack the plane. As they move through the cabin, robbing the passengers, a federal policeman on the plane draws a gun, and one passenger is killed during an ensuing gun battle. The airliner lands at Manila International Airport, where the hijackers force the flight crew to taxi to a remote part of the airport, disembark with the captain and two passengers as hostages, release the hostages at the airport fence, and escape in a waiting getaway car.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
  • November 7 – A Philippine Air Force C-47 Skytrain crashes into a mountainside in the Zambales Mountains on Luzon in the Philippines, killing all 11 people on board.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • November 8 – Two Italian men claiming to be members of the "International Command for Greece" hijack an Olympic Airlines Boeing 707 during a flight from Paris to Athens with 128 other people on board, threatening the flight crew with a gun and a hand grenade, and force the cabin to crew to hand out pamphlets expressing opposition to the rule of the Greek military junta. Announcing that the passengers are being punished for traveling to Greece, they order the airliner to return to Paris, where they surrender to French police officers at Orly Airport.<ref name="skyjack"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • November 30 – A hijacker commandeers Eastern Airlines Flight 532, a Boeing 720 with 45 people on board flying from Miami, Florida, to Dallas, Texas, and forces it to fly to Cuba.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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DecemberEdit

  • December 2 – Wien Consolidated Airlines Flight 55, a Fairchild F-27B, suffers structural failure after encountering severe turbulence and crashes into Spotsy Lake at Pedro Bay, Alaska, killing all 39 people on board.
  • December 3 – Armed with a .45-caliber pistol and what appears to be a hand grenade, Cuban exile Eduardo Canteras hijacks National Airlines Flight 1439 – a Boeing 727 with 35 people on board flying from New York City to Miami, Florida – as it prepares to land at Miami and orders it to bypass Miami and fly on to Havana, Cuba. When the flight crew tells him that the airliner will run out of fuel and crash into the sea before reaching Cuba, he allows it to land at Key West, Florida, to refuel. Local police offer to shoot out the plane's tires while it is on the ground at Key West, but National Airlines officials refuse to let them, citing concerns that Canteras will detonate his grenade. The plane takes off again and flies on to Havana, where Cuban authorities arrest Canteras. The other passengers and crew are held for 24 hours before being allowed to return to the United States.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • December 17 – The last surviving XB-70 Valkyrie – the U.S. Air Force's XB-70A Air Vehicle 1 (AV-1) – makes its last supersonic flight.
  • December 19 – Accompanied by his three-year-old daughter, who he had abducted from his ex-wife, and claiming to have a gun and nitroglycerine, 27-year-old Thomas George Washington hijacks Eastern Airlines Flight 47, a Douglas DC-8 with 151 people on board flying from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Miami, Florida, and forces it to fly to Havana, Cuba. He says he wishes to leave the United States "because of all the hatred and prejudice." He apologizes to the other passengers before disembarking at Havana.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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First flightsEdit

MarchEdit

  • March 20 – LFU 205<ref name="jawa69 p93">Taylor 1969, p. 93.</ref>

AprilEdit

MayEdit

JuneEdit

JulyEdit

AugustEdit

SeptemberEdit

OctoberEdit

NovemberEdit

DecemberEdit

Entered serviceEdit

JanuaryEdit

FebruaryEdit

MarchEdit

AprilEdit

MayEdit

RetirementsEdit

DecemberEdit

Deadliest crashEdit

The deadliest crash of this year was a military shootdown, namely the 1968 Kham Duc C-130 shootdown, when a United States Air Force Lockheed C-130B Hercules was shot down in southern Vietnam on 12 May, during the Vietnam War, killing all 155 people on board; it was at the time the deadliest plane crash of all time. The deadliest civil aviation accident was South African Airways Flight 228, a Boeing 707 which crashed shortly after takeoff from Windhoek, South West Africa on 20 April, killing 123 of the 128 people on board.

ReferencesEdit

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