Remembering the 1977 Evansville Purple Aces
Tuesday, December 13, 1977 was a cold, rainy evening in Evansville, Indiana. Fog was moving in in front of a cold front, and wind gusts whipped across the prairie.
The University of Evansville Purple Aces, the menโs basketball team, was preparing to head to a game at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. But the team had waited over three hours at the airport before their plane arrived. It had been delayed due to inclement weather.
The players and their new coach, Bobby Watson, were excited and anticipating this game, thinking it could be the beginning of the holiday turn-around games they were expecting to win...
With a 1 โ 3 record going into this game, the Aces wanted to prove they had what it would take to bring home a victory, and that their young, optimistic coach was right โ in their first season of Division 1 competition they planned to be a force to be reckoned with come spring. And the City of Evansville staunchly supported them!
But at 7:22 p.m., on runway 18 at Evansville Dress Regional Airport, all hopes for the team and their coach ended.
Within 90 seconds after takeoff, the twin-engine Douglas C-53 (DC-3) chartered to fly
the team to Nashville, lost control and crashed in a nearby field. There were 29 people on board, all of whom lost their livesโฆ
The hometown basketball team was gone. The horror of the crash rebounded around the city, the state, the Midwest, and the country.
The official accident report listed the probable cause of the crash as "An attempted take-off with the rudder and right aileron control locks installed, in combination with a rearward centre of gravity, which resulted in the aircraft's rotating to a nose-high attitude immediately after take-off, and entering the region of reversed command from which the pilot was unable to recover.โ
The report also stated that the passenger baggage had not been loaded correctly, creating an improper weight balance in the rear of the plane.
Of those who were, 14 were members of the Purple Aces basketball team, along with Coach Bobby Watson. Also on board were three student managers, three UE officials, the teamโs radio announcer, two fans, and four members of the flight crew, along with the president of the airline.
No survivors of the team left, save for one member of the Purple Aces had not been injured. Freshman David Furr, who also served as the teamโs statistician, had been sidelined due to an infirmity and was not on the plane that night..
But two-weeks later, Furr and his 16-year-old brother were in a car crash after being hit by a driver. By the end of 1977, all of the members of UEโs Purple Aces were gone.
Remembering those who lost their lives in the crash:
University of Evansville Coach
Robert (Bobby) Watson
Purple Aces Players
Kevin Kingston, senior
John Ed Washington, senior
Tony Winburn, senior
Steve Miller, junior
Bryan Taylor, junior
Keith Moon, sophomore
Warren Alston, freshman
Ray Comandella, freshman
Mike Duff, freshman
Kraig Heckendorn, freshman
Michael Joyner, freshman
Barney Lewis, freshman
Greg Smith, freshman
Mark Siegel, freshman
Student Managers
Jeff Bohnert
Mark (Tank) Kirkpatrick
Mark Kniese
University of Evansville Officials
Bob Hudson, athletic business manager
Gregory Knipping, sports information director
Charles Shike, comptroller
Radio Announcer
Marvin (Marv) Bates
Fans and Boosters
Charles Goad
Maurice (Maury) King
Flight Crew Members & Airline Representatives
Ty Van Pham, pilot
Gaston Ruiz, first officer
Pam Smith, flight attendant
James Stewart, president of National Jet Service, Inc.
Bill Hartford, charter flight manager