Over its operating life, 203 B-47s were lost in crashes, with 464 deaths. This represents approximately 10% of the total number produced. On 8 February 1954, a B-47 of the 22nd Bomber Wing, March AFB, California, crashed in Stoke Wood, a mile and a half short of the runway at RAF Upper Heyford, England, while on a training run. All three crew were killed. On 28 February 1955, a crippled B-47 crashed into a trailer park in
Lake Charles, Louisiana, killing the three crewmen and two people on the ground. On 10 March 1956, four B-47s left
MacDill Air Force Base in Florida for a non-stop flight to
Ben Guerir Air Base in Morocco. After descending through clouds to begin their second round of
aerial refueling over the
Mediterranean Sea at 14,000 feet, one of the four aircraft,
serial number 52-0534, failed to make contact with the tanker; neither the aircraft, its two nuclear weapon
cores, nor its personnel were ever found. On 28 March 1956, a B-47 exploded near
Wichita, Kansas, with an instructor and two student pilots on board. It crashed four miles northeast of the city, killing its crew of three. The office of information services at
McConnell Air Force Base said the explosion occurred after takeoff, probably at about 2,000 feet altitude. Wreckage was strewn along the countryside for several miles as the wings sheared off and the fuselage tumbled to earth. On 27 July 1956, a B-47 of the 307th Bombardment Wing crashed at
RAF Lakenheath killing its crew and causing a near radioactive incident when it hit a storage igloo containing three
MK-6 nuclear weapons. Although the bombs involved lacked their
fissile cores, each carried about of high explosives for their trigger mechanism. The crash and ensuing fire did not ignite the high explosives and no detonation occurred. In November 1956, B-47E serial number 51-2421 of the
96th Bombardment Wing, flying from
Altus AFB, crashed on a farm near
Hobart, Oklahoma, following engine problems. Four crewmen were killed in the incident. On 9 October 1957, B-47 serial number 51-2177A, of the
447th Bomb Squadron,
321st Bomb Wing at
Pinecastle Air Force Base suffered wing failure and crashed northwest of
Orlando, Florida, and west of
Winter Park, Florida, while conducting a practice demonstration for the annual Strategic Air Command Bombing Navigation and Reconnaissance Competition at Pinecastle AFB. The wing commander, Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy, was killed in the crash; Pinecastle AFB was later renamed
McCoy AFB in his honor. On 4 December 1957, a
MacDill Air Force Base B-47 exploded in mid-air over
Choctawhatchee Bay,
Okaloosa County, Florida. Parts were scattered over a wide underwater area that varied in depth from 20 to 30 feet. Assistance from US Navy divers from the Mine Detection Laboratory,
Panama City, Florida, the Underwater Demolition Team No. 21 from Little Creek, Va., the 3201st Boat Squadron, APGC, recovered most of the plane. The three crew were killed. On 5 February 1958, a B-47 was involved in a mid-air collision with an
F-86 fighter over Georgia, known as
1958 Tybee Island mid-air collision. On 26 February 1958, RB-47E serial number 52-0720 crashed six miles south of Lancaster, OH on approach to Lockbourne AFB, OH, hitting the ground at an angle of 50 degrees. It was determined that the aircraft attained an unusual attitude and/or high speed through disorientation, from which there was no recovery. In actuality, a wheel door had broken away and prevented the control surfaces being fully active. On 13 March 1958, two B-47s crashed on the same date in separate incidents when the lower wing skin failed at the same structural location. One exploded over southeast Tulsa, Oklahoma, killing one crewman and raining debris over at least 8 square miles, witnessed by thousands of people on the ground. Two of the three men on a training mission from McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita, Kansas, parachuted to safety. The third was trapped in the nose of the plane and died. On 10 April 1958, a B-47 from
Lockbourne Air Force Base, Ohio, exploded mid-flight behind the
KC-97G tanker that was to refuel it. The KC-97 was unharmed, but the wreckage fell within a half-mile of a highway and none of the crew survived. On 15 April 1958, a B-47 from
Walker Air Force Base in
New Mexico,
serial number 52–0562, crashed on takeoff at
Pease Air Force Base in
New Hampshire; all four crewmen were killed. On 22 November 1958, a B-47B crashed while taking off from
Loring Air Force Base in Maine, killing all four crew members on board. The plane belonged to a unit at
McCoy Air Force Base in Orlando, Florida. The plane was described as having veered sharply to the right while two-thirds of the way down the runway, eventually crashing 400 feet north of the runway. On 25 November 1958, a KC-135 of the 42d Air Refueling Squadron crashed on takeoff roughly in the same area as the B-47 three days before. On 4 April 1959, B-47 serial number 52-0320 crashed in the Santa Rita mountains, south of Tucson, Arizona, while attempting to land at Davis-Monthan AFB. All three crew were killed. Investigators noted that a faulty
altimeter was a contributing factor. On 24 April 1959, Captain John S. Lappo, operating from
Lockbourne AFB flew a B-47 with two crewmen on board under the
Mackinac Bridge in
Michigan. Following a
general court-martial, he was grounded for life. On 30 December 1959, a B-47B crashed at Torrejón Air Base, Spain one minute after takeoff. All four crew members were killed. On 31 March 1960, B-47E serial number 52-1414, of the 384th Bomb Wing (SAC), 545th Bombardment Squadron, Little Rock AFB, exploded inflight over Little Rock, Arkansas. Three of the four crew and two civilians on the ground were killed. On 1 July 1960 a
RB-47 was shot down over the Barents Sea by Soviet Air Defense. Four crewmen died and 2 survived. On 4 January 1961, B-47 serial number 53-4244, based at Pease Air Force Base, crashed on takeoff; all four crewmen were killed. On 24 February 1961, a B-47 crashed 10 miles southwest of
Hurley, Wisconsin, while on a practice bombing mission from the 40th Bomb Wing at Forbes Air Force Base, Topeka, Kansas. Its four crew were killed. An engine was found 600 yards from the point of impact, indicating it detached prior to the crash. On 2 May 1961, a B-47 crashed eight miles southwest of Hurley, Wisconsin, only a few miles from the scene of a prior B-47 crash on 24 February 1961. Two of four crew survived. Evidence showed that it was steeply diving when the crash occurred. In January 1962, a B-47 based at Plattsburgh Air Force Base on a training mission crashed into the side of
Wright Peak in the
High Peaks in the Adirondacks of New York. All four crew were killed. It had veered about 30 miles east due to inclement weather. Wreckage can still be found at the summit, including a landing gear strut and a partial engine. On 23 July 1962, a B-47 based at Dyess Air Force Base near Abilene, Texas, departed on a training mission through Montana. After crossing into
Paradise Valley, it crashed into Emigrant Peak and exploded while turning toward the northwest. All four crew were killed. On 3 August 1962, B-47 serial number 52-0526, based at Pease Air Force Base, crashed on takeoff; all three crew were killed. On 22 August 1962, B-47 serial number 52-0553, based at Davis–Monthan Air Force Base near Tucson, Arizona, crashed on a training mission shortly before midnight in the
Idaho mountains south of
Smiths Ferry; controlled flight into terrain started a
forest fire, and all three crew were killed. On 20 February 1963, a B-47 of the 98th Bomb Wing based at
Lincoln AFB,
Nebraska, crashed in
Bashaw Township, approximately three miles north of the town of
Comfrey, Minnesota. All four crew were killed. It had just completed a low-altitude simulated bombing run near
Heron Lake when the sixth engine failed, causing it to crash in a field, resulting in a 25-foot deep by 50-foot wide crater. On 3 May 1963, B-47E serial number 52-0051, based at
Mountain Home AFB, Idaho, crashed in
Yellowstone National Park in
Wyoming following a collision with a
KC-135 during midair refueling. The co-pilot ejected safely, but the other three crewmen were killed; the tanker landed safely with no casualties. On 19 August 1963, two B-47E aircraft, serial numbers 53-2365 and 53-6206, both based at
Schilling AFB near
Salina, Kansas, collided over western
Iowa and crashed several miles apart near
Irwin. All six crewman ejected, but three were killed. On 20 August 1963, a QB-47 veered off course on its landing approach at Eglin AFB and crash landed on a road parallel to the runway. It was used for
Bomarc Missile Program tests, normally operated from Eglin AFB Auxiliary Field Number Three (
Duke Field), approximately north of the main base. Two cars were crushed, killing two occupants and injuring a third. On 6 February 1964, B-47E serial number 52-0366, based at Mountain Home AFB, Idaho, crashed in fog on takeoff; all four crewmen were killed. On 27 March 1964, B-47E serial number 52-0321, based at
Little Rock AFB, Arkansas, crashed shortly after takeoff, killing all four crewmen and two boys on the ground. On 27 July 1964, B-47E serial number 53-2366, based at Lincoln AFB, Nebraska, crashed shortly after takeoff; all four crewmen were killed. On 8 December 1964, B-47E serial number 52-0339, based at Pease AFB, crashed in
Newington, New Hampshire, shortly after takeoff; all four crewmen were killed. On 26 February 1965, B-47E serial number 52-0171, based at Pease AFB, collided during mid-air refueling with a KC-135 over the Atlantic Ocean, east of Maine. Both aircraft, with four crew members each, crashed into the water with no survivors. The bomber was one of three returning to Pease after a training mission in Spain. ==Surviving aircraft==