Date: June 24th, 2025 10:45 AM
Author: 11th best Iranian nuclear scientist
The unexplained disappearance of Northwest Flight 2501 over Lake Michigan
More than 70 years later, mystery remains
Ken Haddad, Manager, Coverage and Content
Published: June 23, 2021 at 1:17 PM
Updated: June 23, 2021 at 1:31 PM
Tags: Northwest Flight 2501, Lake Michigan, All About Michigan, Michigan History, History, Michigan, Plane Crash
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DETROIT – On June 23, 1950, a plane traveling from New York to Minneapolis crashed into Lake Michigan.
After more than 70 years, the plane is still missing.
The plane, a Northwest Airlines Douglas DC-4 carrying 55 passengers and 3 crew members, departed LaGuardia Airport at about 9:49 p.m., and was last heard from around 11:50 p.m. while over Lake Michigan.
Countless searches have turned up nothing, and the plane's disappearance remains unsolved.
UPDATE: Search resumes for plane that vanished over Lake Michigan in 1950
The crash was the worst aviation accident in American history at the time, with all 58 occupants presumed dead.
Flight 2501 vanishes over Lake Michigan
The flight plan called for cruising altitude of 6,000 feet to Minneapolis. Captain Robert Lind, aware of stormy weather in the Midwest, requested a cruising altitude of 4,000 feet - but was denied.
Flight 2501 hit Cleveland, Ohio, around 10:49 p.m., and Lind's request to drop to 4,000 feet was approved by traffic control.
Forty minutes later, 2501 was instructed to drop to 3,500 feet to avoid an eastbound flight, which was experiencing severe turbulence over Lake Michigan.
By 11:51 p.m., the plane was in the thick of the storm.
Lind reported that he was over Battle Creek at 3,500 feet and would reach Milwaukee by 11:37 p.m. Central Time. Lind requested a further drop in his last transmission - but was denied.
Just before midnight Central Time, Flight 2501 was noted as overdue. All CAA radio station attempted to make contact with the plane - but never received a response.
Flight 2501 was missing.
Saturday, June 24, 1950: The Aftermath
By morning, it was clear that Flight 2501 had crashed. At 5:30 a.m., the plane was presumed lost, as search and rescue efforts intensified.
The U.S. Navy, U.S. Coast Guard and police forces from surrounding states, including Michigan were all involved in the search.
Searchers found an oil slick, light aircraft debris and an airline logbook floating in the lake many miles from shore.
The floating debris included a fuel tank float, cushions, luggage. The Coast Guard also recovered body parts.
Captain Carl G. Bowman, skipper of the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Mackinaw told the United Press bureau at Detroit by radiotelephone that “Tiny pieces keep floating to the surface all through the area.” He said his men found hands, ears, a seat armrest and fragments of upholstery. Fulford said the largest piece of wreckage was “no bigger than your hand.”
Here is the New York Times report on the crash from June 25, 1950:
A Northwest Airlines DC-4 airplane with fifty-eight persons aboard, last reported over Lake Michigan early today, was still missing tonight after hundreds of planes and boats had worked to trace the craft or any survivors. All air and surface craft suspended search operations off Milwaukee at nightfall except the Coast Guard cutter Woodbine.
The airplane, a four-engine 'air coach' bound from New York to Minneapolis and Seattle, was last heard from at 1:13 o'clock this morning, New York Time, when it reported that it was over Lake Michigan, having crossed the eastern shore line near South Haven, Mich. The craft was due over Milwaukee at 1:27 A.M. and at Minneapolis at 3.23 A.M. If all aboard are lost, the crash will be the most disastrous in the history of American commercial aviation.
The plane carried a capacity load of fifty-five passengers and a crew of three, headed by Capt. Robert Lind, 35 years old, of Hopkins, Minn. In Minneapolis, Northwest Airlines said the craft was 'presumed to be down,' and that they were beginning notification of relatives of passengers. In his last report, Captain Lind requested permission to descend from 3,500 to 2,500 feet because of a severe electrical storm which was lashing the lake with high velocity winds. Permission to descend was denied by the Civil Aeronautic Authority because there was too much traffic at the lower altitude.
At the time 2501 crashed, it was flying through an area of considerable thunderstorm activity. The crew knew about the thunderstorm activity and the possible development of a squall line, but had not been given a forecast describing the development and location of a squall line that had been issued 100 minutes before the accident.
Over the past decade, searchers have covered more than 600 square miles of Lake Michigan, seeking the plane wreckage. 14 shipwrecks have been found, dating back to the 1800s, but no sign of Flight 2501.
Unmarked graves found
In September 2008, Valaire Van Heest, a researcher investigating the crash, found an unmarked grave she believed contained the remains of victims.
She claimed they were buried in at St. Joseph-area cemetery without knowledge of the victims' families.
In a 2008 ceremony at the cemetery, with 58 family members of crash victims, a black granite marker listing the 58 names of those that were lost were dedicated.
"I always wondered what happened to the human remains that washed ashore on the beaches of South Haven," said van Heest, co-founder of (MSRA) Michigan Shipwreck Research Associates based out of Holland, Michigan. "I was disheartened to realize that the burial site has gone unmarked all these years."
Another mass burial site was discovered in South Haven in 2015, also believed to be related to the crash.
On the 65th anniversary of the crash, a remembrance service was held at the grave site. After each name was read, a bell was rung.
"Fifth-eight people's remains may be buried there," said van Heest. "I feel things are working to put a final closure to this accident."
The Lake Michigan Triangle
The area of Lake Michigan where 2501 disappeared is infamously known for its mysterious string of tragic and unexplained events.
The Lake Michigan Triangle - sometimes referred to as the Michigan Triangle - spans from Manitowoc, Wisconsin, to Ludington, Michigan, and south to Benton Harbor.
You can read more about the Michigan Triangle legend here.
The families still remember
In 2014, Local 4's Roger Weber talked to the daughter of Leo Wooler, who was among the 58 killed.
“I was awoken by my mother’s crying. She did her best to try to tell me what had happened, that my father was gone and would not be coming back,” she said.
Plane still missing after crashing in Lake Michigan in 1950
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About the Author
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Ken Haddad
Ken Haddad has been with Local 4/ClickOnDetroit since 2013. He helps lead news coverage and content across broadcast and digital platforms. He's from the Metro Detroit area, and loves covering important news (and sports) in his hometown.
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Comment by Sage Brush.
SB
Sage Brush
June 23, 2021
..a young D.B. Cooper was the Pilot
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Reply by Moon Fairy.
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Moon Fairy
June 23, 2021
Reply to Zed Man
We're not talking about the same one. I wasn't born yet and my aunt and uncle are no longer with us.
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Comment by Crabb E. Oldman.
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Crabb E. Oldman
June 23, 2021
Why is this such a mystery? If the Coast Guard found wreckage and body parts it's pretty much a slam dunk and to what happened to the aircraft. I am wondering, however, how an aircraft flying at such a low altitude disintegrated so completely, but then I'm no engineer.
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Reply by WestMichiganResident.
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WestMichiganResident
June 23, 2021
Reply to Crabb E. Oldman
Quite possibly the airplane was struck by lightning in such a manner that caused it to either explode in the air, or it resulted in the crash of the plane into the lake and it disintegrated upon impact.
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Reply by truthsux.
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truthsux
June 23, 2021
Reply to WestMichiganResident
Since they found an ear, that plane disintegrated, it won't resemble a plane on the lake bed.
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