• 23 March 1951: A C-124A 49-0244 flying from
Loring Air Force Base to
RAF Mildenhall reported a fire in the cargo crates, signaling
mayday. They began jettisoning the crates and announced they were ditching. The C-124 ditched around , southwest of Ireland. The aircraft was intact when it touched down on the ocean. All hands exited the aircraft wearing life preservers and climbed into the inflated five-man life rafts. The rafts were equipped with cold-weather gear, food, water, flares, and
Gibson Girl hand-crank emergency radios. Shortly after the men were in the life rafts, a
B-29 pilot out of England spotted the rafts and the flares that the men had ignited. Their location was reported and the pilot left the scene when his fuel was getting low. No other United States or Allied planes or ships made it to the ditch site for over 19 hours, until Sunday, 25 March 1951. When the ships arrived, all they found were some charred crates and a partially deflated life raft. Ships and planes continued searching for the next several days, but not a single body was found. Some circumstantial evidence indicates that the airmen may have been "snatched" by the Soviet Union for their intelligence value, but their fate remains a mystery. See
1951 Atlantic C-124 disappearance. • 22 November 1952: C-124A 51-0107, flying out of
McChord Air Force Base in
Washington,
crashed into the Colony Glacier on Mount Gannett, east of
Anchorage,
Alaska, killing all 41 passengers and 11 crew. Debris from the plane and remains of some of the victims were found by the
Alaska National Guard on 10 June 2012, having apparently been uncovered due to the receding of the glacier. By 2014, remains of 17 victims had been recovered. • 20 December 1952: C-124 50-0100 flying out of
Moses Lake, Washington (
Larson AFB), and taking airmen home to Texas for the holidays as part of "Operation Sleigh Ride",
crashed not long after takeoff. In total, 87 airmen were killed. • 18 June 1953: C-124 51-137 took off from
Tachikawa Air Base in Japan. Shortly after takeoff, one of the engines failed, forcing the pilot to make an emergency landing. Due to a loss of airspeed, the pilot lost control and crashed into a melon patch,
killing all seven crew and 122 passengers. At the time, it was the worst accident in aviation history. • 6 April 1956: C-124 52-1078, crashed on takeoff from Travis AFB. Three of the seven crew members died in the crash. The cause of the crash was attributed to the crossing of the elevator control cables by maintenance personnel. • 2 April 1957: C-124A 51-5176 crashed on final approach in
Cambridge Bay, Nunavut (at the time, in the Northwest Territories), while ferrying supplies for the construction of the
DEW Line station. No fatalities occurred, but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair. • 31 August 1957: C-124C 52-1021, operated by the 1st Strategic Squadron, crashed during an
instrument approach to
Biggs Air Force Base in
El Paso, Texas, in bad weather after a flight from
Hunter AFB near
Savannah, Georgia. Five aircrew were killed, and 10 were injured. • 4 September 1957, C-124A 51-5173
en route from
Larson AFB, Washington, crashed while attempting a landing at
Binghamton Airport,
Binghamton, New York. The C-124A was delivering 20 tons of equipment for
Link Aviation. The crew of nine survived. • 27 March 1958: C-124C 52-0981 collided in midair with a USAF
Fairchild C-119C Flying Boxcar, 49-0195, over farmland near
Bridgeport, Texas, killing all 15 on the Globemaster and all three on the Flying Boxcar. The two transports crossed paths over a
VHF omnidirectional range (VOR) navigational radio beacon during cruise flight under
instrument flight rules in low visibility. The C-124 was on a north-north-easterly heading flying at its properly assigned altitude of 7,000 ft (2,100 m); the C-119 was on a southeasterly heading, and the crew had been instructed to fly at 6,000 ft (1,800 m), but their aircraft was not flying at this altitude when the collision occurred. • 16 October 1958: C-124C 52-1017 crashed into a mountain near
Cape Hallett Bay, killing seven of the 13 on board. Navigational errors were made during this air-drop mission over
Antarctica. • 18 April 1960: C-124C 52-1062 crashed into a hillside after taking off in heavy fog from
Stephenville-Harmon Air Force Base,
Newfoundland and Labrador,
Canada, killing all nine on board. • 24 May 1961: C-124 51-0174 crashed following takeoff from McChord Air Force Base. Eighteen of the 22 passengers and crew were killed. M/Sgt
Llewellyn Morris Chilson, the second-highest decorated soldier of World War II, was one of the four survivors. • 2 January 1964: C-124C 52–0968 of the 24th Air Transport Squadron flying from
Wake Island Airfield to
Hickam Air Force Base,
Honolulu, was on a flight from Tachikawa Air Force Base near Tokyo, Japan, with 11 tons of cargo; the plane disappeared over the ocean, 1,200 km west of Hawaii. The Globemaster II is last heard from at 0159 hrs. An automatic SOS signal was detected emanating from an aircraft-type radio with a constant carrier frequency of 4728 kHz, issuing an automatically keyed distress message. Eight crew and one passenger were lost in the accident. • 22 January 1965: C-124 52-1058 crashed into mountains while on approach to
Athens Airport. All 10 passengers and crew were killed. • 12 February 1966: C-124 52-0980 crashed into the
Pico Mulhacén in the
Sierra Nevada while on a flight from
Morón Air Base to
Murcia–San Javier Airport, Spain. All eight aboard were killed. • 28 July 1968: C-124A 51-5178, flying from
Paramaribo-Zanderij to
Recife, while on approach to land at Recife, flew into a 1,890-ft-high hill, 50 miles (80 km) away from Recife. All 10 occupants died. • 26 August 1970: C-124 52-1049 crashed on approach to
Cold Bay Airport in the Aleutian Islands. All seven on board were killed. • 3 May 1972: C-124 52-1055 crashed on approach to Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport; all 11 on board were killed. ==Surviving aircraft==