1949 Manchester BEA Douglas DC-3 accident
Wreckage of the DC3's undercarriage above Dovestone Reservoir  | |
| Accident | |
|---|---|
| Date | 19 August 1949 | 
| Summary | Controlled flight into terrain caused by navigational and pilot errors. | 
| Site | Saddleworth Moor, West Riding of Yorkshire, England | 
| Aircraft | |
|   G-AHCY, the aircraft involved in the accident  | |
| Aircraft type | Douglas DC-3 | 
| Operator | British European Airways | 
| Registration | G-AHCY | 
| Flight origin | Nutts Corner Airport, Belfast, Northern Ireland | 
| Destination | Manchester Airport, England | 
| Passengers | 29 | 
| Crew | 3 | 
| Fatalities | 24 | 
| Injuries | 8 | 
| Survivors | 8 | 
The 1949 Manchester BEA Douglas DC-3 accident occurred when a twin-engined British European Airways Douglas DC-3 (registration: G-AHCY) crashed on Saddleworth Moor in the Pennines near Oldham, Lancashire, after a flight from Belfast. The accident killed 24 of the passengers and crew on board. The aircraft had first flown in 1944, and was captained by F. W. Pinkerton, a former RAF serviceman who, as a sergeant, had been posted missing during World War II. The airline was government-owned.