American Airlines Flight 1

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American Airlines Flight 1
Summary
Date March 1, 1962
Type Improper maintenance
Site Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport)
Passengers 87
Crew 8
Injuries 0
Fatalities 95
Survivors 0
Aircraft type Boeing 707-123
Operator American Airlines
Tail number N7506A

American Airlines Flight 1, registration N7506A took off from Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport) on March 1, 1962. The Boeing 707-123 was headed to Los Angeles International Airport with 87 passengers and 8 flight crew onboard. Improper maintenance technique resulted in internal wiring damage and rudder failure, causing the Boeing 707-123 to plunge into Jamaica Bay killing all 95 on board the aircraft. Among the victims was Louise Linder Eastman, whose daughter Linda Eastman would later marry the Beatle Paul McCartney. The crash, coincidentally, occurred at the same time that U.S. astronaut John H. Glenn, Jr. was being honored with a ticker-tape parade in lower Manhattan for his successful manned space flight aboard the Mercury capsule Friendship 7 on February 20, 1962.

The flight number is still used as of April 11, 2008 on its New York JFK/Los Angeles LAX route; American Airlines Flight 1 is currently operated daily with a Boeing 767-223ER.

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