Attleboro, MA. – September 22, 1948

Attleboro, Massachusetts – September 22, 1948

     On September 22, 1948, a 28-year-old pilot rented a small airplane at Wilkins Airport in North Attleboro and flew southward over the Attleboro area.  The pilot was a WWII army veteran who’d learned to fly under the GI Bill and was in the process of obtaining his commercial pilot’s license.

     The pilot lived on Prairie Avenue in Attleboro where his father owned a small farm.  He’d told his father that he’d be flying over their house at 3:00 p.m. so his father stood waiting outside.  At the appointed time, the pilot flew low and “buzzed” the farm, and as he did so lost control and crashed into a wooded area on South Main Street and was killed.  

     The pilot’s younger brother was also a pilot.  A few minutes after the crash, the brother happened to fly over the property in a separate airplane and saw the wreckage from above.  He recognized the plane as being one owned by Wilkins Airport and flew to the airport to find out who’d rented it.  Upon learning it was his brother he went to the scene.  

     Source:

     Providence Journal, “Attleboro Flier Dies In Accident”, September 23, 1948, pg. 1. 

Attleboro, MA. – July 2, 1949

Attleboro, Massachusetts – July 2, 1949

     On the evening of July 2, 1949, a 22-year-old pilot rented a single engine airplane at the Berkley Airport in Cumberland, Rhode Island.  With him was a 17-year-old friend and neighbor.  Together they took off towards Attleboro.  

     It was the pilot’s custom, whenever he rented an airplane, to “buzz” the home of a friend who lived at 23 Robinston Street in Cumberland.  The home was in Attleboro, but was very close to the Rhode Island state line.  

    According to witnesses, the pilot made the plane do a loop above the property, and as the plane came down it clipped a 15 foot apple tree and sheared off a large branch. It then continued on and just missed hitting the house before it began to bounce along the ground  strewing debris before finally crashing into a gravel bank just 20 feet over the Massachusetts state line.  The plane was destroyed and both occupants were killed.  There were no injuries to persons on the ground.    

     Source:

     The Attleboro Sun, “Two Killed As Airplane Falls”, July 5, 1949

Attleboro, MA. – June 11, 1945

Attleboro, Massachusetts – June 11, 1945

     On the evening of June 11, 1945, a 42-year-old pilot from Attleboro took off from Wilkins Airport in Plainville, Massachusetts, in a Cub J-2 airplane.  While practicing a simulated landing over Attleboro, the aircraft struck a tree and crash-landed in a flooded meadow on the Diamond Dairy Farm off Richardson Avenue.   The pilot was transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.  The aircraft was left in the meadow overnight while police stood guard.  

     Source:

     The Attleboro Sun, “Pilot Not Seriously Hurt In Plane Crash”, June 12, 1945.

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