This article states/shows two planes went down yesterday. Pics are at the link.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... yover.htmlFour hospitalized when two World War Two-era training planes crash after Memorial Day flyover
A man and a woman went down in a WWII-era plane after a Memorial Day flyover
The 1943 Fairchild PT-23 went down just after midday when it ran out of fuel
Both the male pilot and female passenger were taken to hospital for stitches
Just three hours earlier, another WWII-era plane went down after a flyover
Investigators do not know why the 1944 Aeronca Defender went down
By Hannah Moore For Dailymail.com
Published: 17:32 EDT, 29 May 2018 | Updated: 19:19 EDT, 29 May 2018
Two people were left needing stitches after a commemorative plane from 1943 crashed following a fly over on Memorial Day.
The Second World War aircraft's engine failed just after noon on Monday, sending it nosediving into the ground near Westport Airport in Kansas, The Wichita Eagle reported.
Just hours earlier, the 1943 Fairchild PT-23 had flown over a memorial service, as part of the Commemorative Air Force-Jayhawk Wing.
The plane was designed to train Air Force pilots and more than 8,000 were built over the lifespan of the design, the Golden Wings Museum says.
On a crash report, investigators say the 42-year-old male pilot, who was carrying a female passenger, 'ran out of fuel approaching the runway at Westport Airport and attempted to restart the engine'.
'Engine failed to start and plane crashed leading up to the runway,' the report read.
On the way down, Sergeant Kelly O'Brian told the Witchita Eagle the plane clipped a pole and the ground.
The policeman said with fueling vessels nearby, the accident could have been much worse.
The Kansas Highway Patrol and Federal Aviation Administration are investigating the incident.
In neighboring Nebraska, another Second World War era plane crashed into a bean field about 9am following a flyover.
The 1944 Aeronca Defender, also used for training, went down about 9.15am.
Pilot Dennis Westergaard, 62, and passenger Delmar Chamberlain, 87, were 'pretty roughed up', friend Judy Blomm told KETV, but expected to recover.
Chamberlain, who is a military veteran, was treated and released, while Westergaard was transferred to Nebraska Medicine in Omaha for further treatment.
The cause of the crash is unknown at this time, but Burt County Sheriff's Office and the Federal Aviation Administration are investigating.