The U.S. Air Force has announced the name of a service member who has been recovered from a C-124 Globemaster aircraft that was lost on Nov. 22, 1952. The remains of Air Force Staff Sgt. Eugene R.
This summer is the fourth that U.S. troops and civilians have combed Colony Glacier in Alaska to recover wreckage and identify 52 service members aboard a C-124 Globemaster II that crashed in 1952.
McChord Field has been home to several military cargo aircraft — the C-47 Skytrain, the C-82 Packet, the C-124 Globemaster II and the C-141 Starlifter — going back to World War II. But none has been ...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors and contractors came together in June to search for additional remains from a crash that happened nearly 70 years earlier. On Nov. 22, 1952, a C-124 ...
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska — On November 22, 1952, a U.S. Air Force C-124 Globemaster II flying from McChord Air Force Base, Washington, to Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska, crashed into ...
Alaska-based military members who participated in a search for human remains and personal items from the 1952 crash of a C-124 Globemaster view some of the items that were found, Tuesday, Sept. 29, ...
CHICAGO (CBS) – More than 70 years after being killed in a Douglas C-124 Globemaster II military transport aircraft crash, a Chicago service member finally received the sendoff he deserved. A ...
Investigators say aircraft wreckage discovered this summer on a glacier in the mountains east of Anchorage came from an Air Force plane that crashed in 1952, killing everyone on board. The C-124 ...