A handful of accidents changed how everyone flies. Each of these has a published NTSB probable cause and a legacy written into regulation, training, or design. One of them - the Hudson ditching - is where this file meets its sister database of wildlife strikes. Findings below are paraphrased from the NTSB reports.
May 25, 1979 Chicago O'Hare (ORD), Illinois maintenance
American Airlines 191 McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10
273 fatal Takeoff / initial climb
Probable cause The left engine and its pylon tore away during takeoff rotation, damaged the wing's leading edge, and retracted the outboard slats. Asymmetric lift rolled the DC-10 as it stalled. The NTSB traced the damaged pylon to a time-saving maintenance procedure that lifted the engine and pylon as one unit.
Legacy Still the deadliest aviation accident on U.S. soil. It forced a rethink of engine-change procedures and of stall-warning systems that went dark when the crew needed them most.
Jan 13, 1982 Washington National (DCA), District of Columbia icing
Air Florida 90 Boeing 737-200
78 fatal 5 survived Takeoff
Probable cause The crew took off in a snowstorm without turning on engine anti-ice, so iced-over probes fed them false, high thrust readings. The undersped 737 never climbed, struck the 14th Street Bridge, and fell into the frozen Potomac. Ice on the wings and a decision not to reject the takeoff sealed it.
Legacy A textbook cold-weather and crew-coordination case. It reshaped de-icing standards and how crews challenge a takeoff that feels wrong.
Jul 19, 1989 Sioux City (SUX), Iowa uncontained failure
United Airlines 232 McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10
112 fatal 184 survived Cruise / emergency descent
Probable cause The tail-mounted engine's fan disk broke apart from an undetected fatigue crack in the titanium. Shrapnel severed all three hydraulic systems and left the crew with no flight controls at all. They flew the crippled jet to Sioux City on engine thrust alone.
Legacy A survivable outcome from an unsurvivable failure - 184 lived. It drove changes to titanium inspection and to how crews improvise with total control loss.
May 11, 1996 Everglades, Florida cargo fire
ValuJet 592 McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32
110 fatal Climb
Probable cause Chemical oxygen generators, improperly labeled and packed by a maintenance contractor, ignited in the forward cargo hold. Fire filled the cabin and the DC-9 dived into the swamp minutes after takeoff.
Legacy It made fire detection and suppression mandatory in Class D cargo holds and hardened the rules for shipping hazardous materials by air.
Jul 17, 1996 off East Moriches, New York fuel tank
TWA 800 Boeing 747-100
230 fatal Climb
Probable cause The nearly empty center wing fuel tank held a flammable fuel-air vapor. A short circuit outside the tank most likely carried energy into it and set it off, blowing the 747 apart off Long Island.
Legacy One of the most exhaustive investigations ever run. It produced fuel-tank flammability rules and the inerting systems now standard on transport jets.
Feb 12, 2009 Clarence Center, New York loss of control
Colgan Air 3407 Bombardier Q400
50 fatal Approach
Probable cause On an icy night approach to Buffalo, the stall warning fired and the captain pulled back instead of pushing forward, driving the Q400 into a full stall it never recovered from. The NTSB cited the crew's response, fatigue, and lax cockpit discipline.
Legacy The last U.S. airline crash to kill scheduled passengers for roughly sixteen years. It produced the 1,500-hour first-officer rule and sweeping pilot-fatigue and training reforms.
Jan 15, 2009 Hudson River, New York bird strike
US Airways 1549 Airbus A320-214
155 survived Initial climb
Probable cause A flock of Canada geese went into both engines seconds after takeoff from LaGuardia, killing all thrust. With no runway in reach, the crew ditched in the Hudson. Everyone aboard survived.
Legacy The 'Miracle on the Hudson' - and the point where this file touches its sister database of wildlife strikes. It sharpened bird-strike research and ditching and engine-restart procedures.
Jul 6, 2013 San Francisco (SFO), California unstable approach
Asiana Airlines 214 Boeing 777-200ER
3 fatal 304 survived Approach / landing
Probable cause On a clear-day visual approach, the crew let the airspeed decay while relying on autothrottle behavior they misunderstood. The 777 struck the seawall short of the runway. The NTSB cited mismanagement of the approach and over-reliance on automation.
Legacy A defining automation-dependency case. It pushed carriers toward more hand-flying proficiency and clearer autothrottle training.