When a US Air Force plane crashed in Hong Kong, killing all but one on board, in 1961
A holiday in Hong Kong ended in tragedy when 15 people – servicemen, their family members and aircrew – were killed after the Douglas DC-3 they were flying in crashed into Mount Parker
“USAF Plane Crashes into Shaukiwan Hill,” ran the headline in the South China Morning Post on April 20, 1961. “An American Air Force plane crashed and burned on a hillside near Aldrich Village in the Shaukiwan area yesterday evening, a few minutes after it had taken off from Kai Tak airport,” the report read.
“There were 15 people on board – a crew of four and 11 American military personnel. They were returning to Tainan in Formosa after a recreational visit here. Preliminary reports said that five bodies and one survivor had been found,” it stated.
“The aircraft – a DC-3 No 9014 – was airborne at about 6.07pm. It crashed almost immediately afterwards as it headed out of Hongkong in the direction of Lyemun Pass [ …] A vast land, air and sea search was at
once mounted, but the wreckage was not located until about 10.30pm after a 14-year-old boy, Tam Bing-kwan, reported to the Chaiwan Police Station that he knew the scene of the crash.”

A story in the Post the following day revealed there had been, in fact, 16 people on board. “The sole survivor of the Mount Parker air disaster which took 15 lives on Wednesday night, has been identified as Airman First Class Richard W. Ferron of Westbrook, Maine.