Naushon Island, Massachusetts – January 1, 1939
On January 1, 1939, an aircraft with two men aboard left New Bedford Airport around 11:00 a.m., en-route to Nantucket. The plane was piloted by Samuel N. Sweet; his passenger was William G. Barlow.
After leaving Nantucket, the engine began to sputter, so Sweet landed at Oak Bluffs Airport on Martha’s Vineyard to have the problem attended to.
“Everything seemed in order,” Sweet later told reporters, “so we headed for the mainland. We were flying at 2,000 feet over Naushon Island when the motor froze because an oil line became plugged. I dropped her to 1,500 feet to regain speed, but couldn’t come out of the stall. I looked about for a suitable landing place and spotted a golf course at the Moors. Our glide carried us easily, but train tracks and telephone wires loomed up as I was about to land. I didn’t dare go under because of the tracks, so when the plane was eight or ten feet from the ground I pulled the nose up and let her drop.”
Both men suffered non-life-threatening head injuries in the crash.
Source: Falmouth Enterprise, “Plane Crashes At The Moors”, January 6, 1939