U.S. Army Air Forces 1st Lt. Herbert G. Tennyson, 24, from Wichita, died in an explosion and crash in March 1944.
A devastating plane crash that took the lives of more than 60 people this week has drawn Wichita — known globally as the "air capital of the world" — and its aviation roots into the national ...
Airmen from other warplanes in the formation reported seeing "Heaven Can Wait" pitching up violently before banking left and ...
American Airlines Flight 5342 was coming in from Wichita, Kansas ... radio transmission may have left the crew unable to hear ...
On the heels of the Trump administration’s announcement concerning the FAA cuts, some travelers are facing difficulties.
Investigators have announced that the black box from the Army Black Hawk helicopter that collided with a commercial jetliner ...
Staff Sgt. Ryan Austin O’Hara was identified as one of the pilots in the Black Hawk helicopter that collided into American Airlines flight 5342 Wednesday night.
Meanwhile, the National Transportation Safety Board is leading the investigation into how the crash ... from Wichita approaching one of DCA's three runways — was 325 feet in the air, give ...
Tennyson of Wichita, Kansas, died in March 1944 with 10 other aircrew aboard the Heaven Can Wait bomber in present-day Papua New Guinea. It wasn't until 2024 that the Department of Defense ...
WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — A Wichita World War II Army Air Force Pilot, Herbert G. Tennyson, is coming home. His remains were ...
The wife of a Connecticut man who died in last month’s collision between a passenger jet and a military helicopter in ...