F-BATO
Flight / Schedule
F-BATO
Aircraft
SNCASE SE.161 LanguedocRegistration
F-BATO
MSN
32
Year of Manufacture
1948
Operator
Air FranceDate
August 29, 1948 at 12:00 AM
Type
CRASHCrash Site
Airport (less than 10 km from airport)
Crash Location
Paris-Le Bourget Seine-Saint-Denis
Region
Europe • France
Coordinates
48.9434°, 2.4220°
Narrative Report
On August 29, 1948 at 12:00 AM, F-BATO experienced a crash involving SNCASE SE.161 Languedoc, operated by Air France, with the event recorded near Paris-Le Bourget Seine-Saint-Denis.
at a airport (less than 10 km from airport) crash site.
0 people were known to be on board, 0 fatalities were recorded, 0 survivors were identified or estimated.
Crew on board: 0, crew fatalities: 0, passengers on board: 0, passenger fatalities: 0, other fatalities: 0.
The four engine aircraft suffered an accident in Paris-Le Bourget Airport. There were no casualties.
Aircraft reference details include registration F-BATO, MSN 32, year of manufacture 1948.
Geospatial coordinates for this crash are approximately 48.9434°, 2.4220°.
Fatalities
Total
0
Crew
0
Passengers
0
Other
0
Crash Summary
The four engine aircraft suffered an accident in Paris-Le Bourget Airport. There were no casualties.
Occupants & Outcome
Crew On Board
0
Passengers On Board
0
Estimated Survivors
0
Fatality Rate
—
Known people on board: 0
Operational Details
Operator
Air FranceCrash Site
Airport (less than 10 km from airport)
Region / Country
Europe • France
Aircraft Details
Similar Plane Crashes
French Air Force - Armée de l'Air
Breguet 14
The aircraft crashed iupon landing somewhere in France. Pilot Charles C. Bassett survived.
Royal Air Force - RAF
De Havilland DH.4
The airplane crashed in unknown circumstances in the sea off Saint-Vaast-la-Hougue, killing both crew members. Crew: 2Lt A. H. Aitken, 2Lt D. U. Thomas.
French Air Force - Armée de l'Air
De Havilland DH.4
The DH.4 collided with a Salmson aircraft over Latrecey-Ormoy-sur-Aube and crashed, killing the pilot Raymond B. Messer.
Royal Air Force - RAF
De Havilland DH.4
The single engine aircraft departed London on a flight to Paris, carrying one pilot and one passenger, the agronomist and botanist Aaron Aaronsohn. While flying over The Channel, the aircraft crashed in unknown circumstances in the sea off Boulogne-sur-Mer. Both occupants were killed.
Vickers-Armstrongs Ltd
Vickers Viking (Serie I/II/III & IV)
The British aviator John William Alcock departed Brooklands (Weybridge) that day to Paris-Le Bourget to take part to the first airplane exhibition in Europe after the WWI. While overflying Seine-Maritime, the pilot lost control of the seaplane that crashed in Cottévrard, some 20 km north of Rouen. The pilot was seriously injured (skull fracture) and died few hours later. He performed the first nonstop transatlantic flight from Newfoundland to Ireland last 15JUN1919 with Arthur Whitten Brown. He was aged 27.
Adastral Air Lines
Avro 504
Crashed in unknown circumstances somewhere in France. While all three occupants were slightly injured, the aircraft was destroyed.
