Categories: Sport

Loss of the US Figure Skating Team – 1961

The US figure skating team of 1961 contained the golden girls and boys of their generation. That year’s National Championships were the first to be screened nationwide on CBS’s Sunday Sports Spectacular. Before the media exposure, the athletes were little known outside their sport, but by the end of the broadcast many were household names. Their grace and athleticism impressed a large TV audience and the sport’s profile was high. With success in their sights, the team, along with a large entourage of coaches and family, headed to the World Championships in Prague.

Watching them as they posed for photographs on the steps of Sabena Flight 548 at New York’s Idlewild Airport, nobody could have dreamed it was to be the last their admiring public would see of them. The plan was to fly to Brussels and then catch a connecting flight to Prague. On the approach into the Belgian capital the pilot overshot the runway and angled around to make a second attempt. Something had gone badly wrong with the flight controls and the plane came down in a nearby field, killing all on board as well as a farmer tending his cabbage field. The crash had a devastating effect on the tight-knit skating community, and the championships in Prague were called off. Among the dead was the nine-times US ladies champion Maribel Vinson-Owen together with her two daughters.

The disaster had a galvanizing effect on the sport of figure skating in America. With the loss of so many coaches and athletes, the US authorities decided to reach out far and wide to help the sport get going again. Overseas coaches were brought in and children across the nation were encouraged to take lessons. What had previously been regarded as a Boston-based sport now became a truly national pastime.

When was the Loss of the US Figure Skating Team: February 15 1961

Where was the Loss of the US Figure Skating Team: Brussels, Belgium

What was the Loss of the US Figure Skating Team death toll: 73

You should know: The American authorities were so alarmed by the crash that they sent FBI officers to Belgium to help with the investigation. Though the final report into the crash was inconclusive, pilot error was ruled out.

devastating

Share
Published by
devastating

Recent Posts

5 Cities at High Risk of Major Flooding

Flooding Threats: These U.S. Cities Might Be in Danger Flooding is probably one of the…

3 weeks ago

4 Maritime Disasters That Left Us in Shock (Titanic’s Not Included)

What do you know about these maritime disasters? Maritime catastrophes have long captivated us, from…

3 weeks ago

Why Are So Many Planes Crashing Right Now?

What's going on in the aviation world? As you've likely heard, there have been quite…

3 weeks ago

The 4 WORST Diseases You Can Catch From Animals!

We all love animals, be they our sweet pets and companions or the ones we…

3 weeks ago

10 States Most at Risk for Natural Disasters in 2025

How Ready Is Your State for Natural Disasters? Have you ever taken a moment to…

4 weeks ago

6 Ways Wildfires Grow Stronger Overnight

The wildfires that happened recently in California made us think about the ways wildfires grow…

1 month ago