In 1950, a U.S. troop plane carrying 44 passengers vanished without a trace in the Yukon | CBC Documentaries - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 05:10 PM | Calgary | 5.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Documentaries

In 1950, a U.S. troop plane carrying 44 passengers vanished without a trace in the Yukon

It's one of Canada's greatest unsolved mysteries. To this day, no sign of the aircraft or its passengers has been found.

It's one of Canada's greatest unsolved mysteries. To this day, no sign of the aircraft has been found.

A black and white photo of a Skymaster plane flying in front of clouds.
The original Skymaster disappeared without a trace on January 26, 1950. (Skymaster Down)

On January 26, 1950, a U.S.Airforce troop plane left Anchorage for Montana with 44 people on board. It took off in frigid cold with precious few hours of daylight left.

The crew of the Douglas C-54 Skymaster #2469 was supposed to check in every 30 minutes along the route. As the aircraft crossed into Yukon, they radioed the tiny outpost of Snag to say that there was ice forming on the wings, but otherwise, all was well.

After that, the Skymaster disappeared. And to this day no sign of the aircraft or its passengers has ever been found.

Skymaster Downis a decades-old mystery that still defines the families of those 44 missing people.

The U.S. Air Force stagedahugesearch operation immediately after the plane was lost. Day by day, in the winter of 1950, newspapers around the world carried stories about the Skymaster, its passengers and the desperate rescue operation. The Yukon was covered with heavy snow as the temperatures plunged. U.S. and Canadian aircraft flew grid patterns all along the flight path, with spotters peering through frosted windows. It was chaotic four of the search planes crashed.

A black and white newspaper clipping shows a family gathered around a radio. The headline reads 'Brooke Flier's Family Awaits News of Missing C-54 Plane.'
A newspaper clipping shows the parents, brothers and sisters of Mike Tisik, co-pilot of the missing C-54 Skymaster, listening to radio reports and hoping to hear that Tisik was safe. (Skymaster Down)

Several weeks later, all the U.S. military aircraft were rerouted to the Gulf of Alaska to search for a missing bomber carrying a nuclear warhead. The families of the 44 people who missing with the Skymaster received death certificates. And the U.S. Air Force never returned to the Yukon to search again.

The Douglas C-54 Skymaster had four engines, a 100' wingspanand a 26' high tail fin. Even in the massive expanse of the Yukon wilderness, it would be hard to hide a plane that big. Is it in a lake? At the bottom of a valley? Is there a chance that it flew off course and crashed into the mountains?

There's a database of over 500 known airplane wrecks in the territory. All have been located, visited and accounted for. But the Skymaster remains stubbornly lost.

Skymaster Downtells the stories of the victim's families and takes the audience north, where even today an intrepid group of Yukoners strive to give those families closure by going out and searching every summer, ever hopeful that the Skymaster will finally turn up.

A woman with short brown hair and glasses sits at a table in front of files of paperwork. She holds a piece of paper that reads
Judy Jackson's father was the radio operator on the missing aircraft. (Skymaster Down )

Imagine if a mysterious plane crash heavily weighed on your own family story that generations hadbeen left to wonderwill we ever find out what happened?Not knowing becomes an affliction.

Skymaster Downis a story that has almost been lost to time; it's a tale hardly anyone knows about anymore. It's one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in Canadian history, set against one of the world's most spectacular and deadly landscapes, with a cast of fascinating and heartbreaking characters.

A U.S. troop plane went missing over the Yukon in 1950. Its never been found

3 years ago
Duration 3:14
One lost airplane. 44 missing people. One incredible unsolved mystery. Watch the documentary Skymaster Down on CBC Gem.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Get our curated selection of must-watch docs from CBC in your inbox every week!

...

The next issue of Documentaries newsletter will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.