- Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 831 - Wikipedia
Trans-Canada Air Lines (TCA) Flight 831 was a flight from Montréal–Dorval International Airport to Toronto International Airport on November 29, 1963
- TCA Flight 831 – Montreal’s Worst Air Crash (1963)
On a rainy November evening, Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 831 took off from Montreal-Dorval Airport, bound for Toronto Just five minutes later, the aircraft crashed — marking what was, at the time, the deadliest air disaster in Canadian history All 118 people on board were killed
- Man seeks stories of 1963 airline tragedy | CBC News
On Nov 29, 1963, John MacPherson Page was on board Trans-Canada Airlines Flight 831 bound for Toronto when it crashed just minutes after takeoff from Montreal's Dorval airport, landing in
- Formerly Canadas Deadliest Plane Crash: The Unsolved Mystery Of Trans . . .
Trans-Canada Flight 831 was a regular scheduled flight from Montreal to Toronto The flight on November 29th, 1963, was operated by a Douglas DC-8 aircraft, and after a delay in departure, it took off at 18:28 from Runway 06R at Montreal-Dorval Airport
- Voices from a forgotten tragedy : Trans-Canada Air Lines flight 831
Voices from a forgotten tragedy : Trans-Canada Air Lines flight 831
- REPORT OF COMMISSION OF INQUIRY INTO CRASH OF TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES DC . . .
Company personal and health records of the flight crew as well as interviews with their private physicians, revealed no significant information As far as can be told from these records and interviews with friends, the flight crew were physically and mentally competent ,
- Trans-Canada Air Lines - TCAL | Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives
The Douglas DC-8 aircraft was on a regular scheduled flight Montreal-Dorval Airport (YUL) to Toronto (YYZ), Canada, scheduled to leave Montreal at 18:10 There were some delays in the boarding of the passengers and Flight 831 started its takeoff roll on runway 06R at approximately 18:28
- Trans-Canada Air Lines Flight 831 - WIKI 2
About five minutes after takeoff in poor weather, the jet crashed about 32 km (20 mi) north of Montreal, near Ste-Thérèse-de-Blainville, Quebec, Canada, killing all 111 passengers and seven crew members The crash was the deadliest in Canadian history at the time [3]
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