• On December 28, 1970,
Trans Caribbean Airways Flight 505 operated with a
Boeing 727-200 jetliner made a hard landing and ran off the side of the runway. Two of the 48 passengers died in the subsequent fire, and the aircraft was then destroyed by the ensuing conflagration. • On April 27, 1976,
American Airlines Flight 625 operated with a
Boeing 727-100 jetliner ran off the end of the runway, killing 37 of the 88 on board. The old St. Thomas runway was 4,658 feet long at the time. Following the crash,
American Airlines (AA) suspended jet service to the airport and began operating
Convair 440 propliners instead for service to nearby St. Croix (STX) for connections to American mainline jet flights until a new, longer 7,000 foot runway was constructed. These CV-440 flights were operated by a division of AA, American Inter-Island, as an interim service until American elected to resume mainline jet aircraft operations into St. Thomas with the advent of the longer runway. The American Inter-Island Convair 440 aircraft were owned by American Airlines and flown and maintained by Antilles Air Boats, a seaplane operator in the Virgin Islands. • On March 25, 1977,
Douglas C-53 N692A of Island Traders was damaged beyond economic repair in a heavy landing. • On September 17, 1989,
Douglas DC-3 N4425N,
Douglas C-47s N100SD, N4471J and N4577Z; and
Douglas C-49J N28346 of
Aero Virgin Islands; along with Douglas C-47A N101AP of
Four Star Air Cargo; were damaged beyond economic repair by
Hurricane Hugo. • On December 30, 2003,
Douglas DC-3C N781T of
Tol-Air Services was substantially damaged when the starboard undercarriage collapsed on landing after a flight that originated at
San Juan, Puerto Rico. • On July 19, 2006,
Douglas DC-3C N782T of Tol-Air Services ditched into the sea off Charlotte Amalie after an engine failure shortly after take-off from Cyril E. King Airport. All four people on board escaped as the aircraft floated for about ten minutes before sinking. The aircraft now lies in of water and is a dive site. • A Kestrel
Convair C-131F, registration N8277Q performing a freight flight from St. Thomas (US Virgin Islands) to unknown destination with 2 crew, departed St. Thomas' runway 28 and was in the initial climb around 07:47L (11:47Z) when the tower observed smoke from the left-hand engine (P&W R-2800). The crew declared emergency reporting an engine fire and loss of hydraulics and initiated a return to St. Thomas' runway 10, where the aircraft touched down but could not slow. The airplane veered right off the runway, broke through the airport fence and came to a stop on the airport access road. No injuries occurred, the airplane received substantial damage. The airport was closed for several hours. The FAA reported the aircraft went off the runway and received substantial damage. • On October 13, 2012, a
Piper Aztec, N5553Y, departing nearby St. Croix carrying three passengers, crashed approximately eight miles south of Cyril E. King Airport. There was one survivor. After a year-long investigation, it was determined that the pilot suffered
spatial disorientation, descended before he needed to and then crashed into the water. • On June 17, 2015, an
American Airlines Boeing 757 preparing to fly to John F. Kennedy International Airport was grounded due to a mechanical failure. After returning to the gate, an airport service vehicle collided with the aircraft, severely damaging one of the aircraft's jet engines. No injuries occurred. • On September 6, 2017,
Hurricane Irma caused severe damage to the terminal especially around gate 6. No injuries were reported. ==References==