![](https://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2018/01/BI228671.jpg)
The airplane was a Douglas DC-3-362, registered NC1946.
The pilot in command was Captain Wayne C. Williams, an 11-year employee of T&WA. He had 12,204 hours total flight time with more than 3,500 hours in DC-3s. He had flown 204 hours at night within the previous six months. The co-pilot was S. Morgan Gillette, who had been with T&WA for a little less than 1 year, 6 months. He had 1,330 hours of flight time with 650 in DC-3s.
![](https://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2013/01/Douglas-DC-3-NC1945-Transcontinental-and-Western-Airlines.jpg)
After a refueling stop at Las Vegas Airport, the airliner departed at 7:07 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, on the final leg of the flight to the Lockheed Air Terminal at Burbank, California (officially, the Bob Hope Airport, but now known as Hollywood Burbank Airport). It was dark, but the weather was clear. Because of wartime regulations, the lighted airway beacons on the route had been extinguished.
![](https://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2017/01/19410630-Lunken-Airport-DC-3-NC1944-Nelson-Ronsheim-Michael-Smithfron-in-flight-m.jpg)
At 7:20 p.m., PST, Flight 3 crashed into a vertical cliff face on Potosi Mountain, an 8,517-foot (2,596 meters) mountain 32 miles (51.5 kilometers) southwest of Las Vegas, Nevada. The DC-3 was completely destroyed and all 22 persons aboard were killed, including actress Carole Lombard, Mrs. Clark Gable.
In planning the flight, the crew had made an error in the compass course for this leg of the flight. Their written flight plan, filed with the airline’s operations department, indicated a compass course of 218° which took them directly to the mountain.
![Carole Lombard (6 October 1908–16 January 1942)](http://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2013/01/carole-lombard-7.jpg)
Carole Lombard (née Jane Alice Peters) was one of the most successful motion picture actresses in Hollywood. She was born at Fort Wayne, Indiana, in 1908, and had her first motion picture role in 1921. At age 16, she was under contract to the Fox Film Corporation and as was customary, was given a more dramatic name. She was primarily a comedic actress though she also had several dramatic roles.
Lombard was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress in “My Man Godfrey” which starred William Powell, to whom she was married 1931–1933. In 1938, Lombard married actor Clark Gable.
Carole Lombard had been on a War Bonds tour and was returning home to Hollywood. She was seated in an aisle seat in the third row, next to a U.S. Army private. Her mother, Elizabeth Peters, was seated directly across the aisle.
![Transcontinental and Western Flight 3 crash site](http://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2013/01/Transcontinental-and-Western-Flight-3-crash-site.png)
![Crash site, T&WA Flight 3 on Petosi Mountain, Nevada.](http://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2015/01/Screen-Shot-2016-01-15-at-20.38.04.png)
![TWA Flight 3 crashed on this vertical face of Mount Potosi, Nevada, 16 January 1942, killing all on board. (Harlan Stockman)](https://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2013/01/TWA-Flight-3-crash-site-Mount-Potosi-Nevada.jpg)
The DC-3-362 was 64 feet, 5 inches (19.634 meters) long with a wingspan of 95 feet (28.956 meters). It was 16 feet, 11 inches (5.156 meters) high. The airplane weighed approximately 18,000 pounds (8,165 kilograms) empty and had a gross weight of 25,200 pounds (11,431 kilograms).
The DC-3 had a cruise speed of 150 miles per hour (241 kilometers per hour) and maximum speed of 237 miles per hour (381 kilometers per hour) at 8,500 feet (2,591 meters). The airplane had a service ceiling 24,000 feet (7,315 meters), and its range was 1,025 miles (1,650 kilometers).
The Douglas DC-3 was in production for 11 years with 10,655 civil and C-47 military airplanes built, and another 5,000 license-built copies. Over 400 are still in commercial service.
![Petosi Mountain, looking west. (Detail from photograph by Stan Shebs)](http://static.thisdayinaviation.com/wp-content/uploads/tdia//2015/01/Screen-Shot-2016-01-15-at-20.27.07.png)
Commercial Aviation Archaeology has a very informative site on this accident at:
https://www.lostflights.com/Commercial-Aviation/11642-TWA-TWA-Douglas-DC-3/
© 2019, Bryan R. Swopes