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SharePrint Marshall Plane Crash

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On November 14, 1970, a chartered DC-9 airliner owned by Southern Airways slammed into a hillside just short of Tri-State Airport near Ceredo, killing all 75 of the passengers and crew. The victims included nearly the entire Marshall University football team, all but one of their coaches, and several fans. The team was returning from a game against Eastern Carolina University which had been played that afternoon in Greenville, North Carolina. It was the first time the team had flown to a game the entire season.

The victims included head coach Rick Tolley, athletic director Charles Kautz, 37 players, and 36 other fans, coaches and crew members. Among the fans were Huntington City Councilman Murrill Ralsten and Michael Prestera, just elected to the House of Delegates from Cabell County in the previous week’s election.

At the National Transportation Safety Board hearings, conducted in Huntington a month later, the findings listed the probable cause of the crash as ‘‘either failure of the pilots to properly read their altimeters or an altimeter error.’’ The NTSB said it could not be specific as to what caused the crash but equipment installed at the airport a few months after the crash might have prevented the accident, according to later published reports.

The tragedy was a traumatic event, and still remains a part of the collective memory of Marshall University. A campus memorial near the Marshall Student Center, a bronze-and-copper fountain with 75 separate jets of water in memory of the 75 who died, is the scene of annual ceremonies to remember the Marshall University plane crash victims.

The crash was the subject of a 2006 movie, We Are Marshall, which told the story of the accident and the recovery of the university’s football program. In 2023, the university and the Marshall 75 Family Alumni Chapter established the 75 Legacy Scholarship Fund, providing descendants of the crash victims with full scholarships to Marshall.

 

e-WV presents West Virginia Public Broadcasting on the Marshall Plane Crash

This Article was written by Tom D. Miller

Last Revised on December 26, 2023

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Sources

Hardin, Jack. Marshall Team, Coaches, Fans Die in Plane Crash. Huntington Herald-Advertiser, 11/15/1970.

Peyton, Dave. 10 Years Later, Huntington Still Remembers. Huntington Herald-Dispatch, 11/9/1980.

National Transportation Safety Board. A Report on the Marshall Plane Crash. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1971.

Cite This Article

Miller, Tom D. "Marshall Plane Crash." e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia. 26 December 2023. Web. 25 April 2024.

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