Today, as we end “21 Days of Clemente,” we want to repost a piece written by our friend and contributor, Aristotle “Mugsy” Sakellaridis – 52 Years Ago: The “Four Other Passengers” on that Clemente Plane Crash
We decided to publish this piece as a fitting way to end “21 Days of Clemente” by also honoring and recognizing the other passengers that also died on that fatal airplane crash. It is only fitting that we do so as those “other passengers” also sacrificed their time leaving their families on a festive New Year’s night to help Clemente deliver those supplies to Nicaragua. Unfortunately, Clemente and “those other passengers” never made it to Nicaragua and all, but one is still lying in the deep Atlantic Ocean floor where the plane rest with Clemente.
Happy New Year to you and yours.
Fifty one years ago on New Years Eve, a DC-7 cargo plane crashed shortly after its 9:20 pm takeoff. Perishing was pilot Jerry Hill, co-pilot Arthur Rivera, engineer Francisco Matias, and Rafael Lozano, who was an associate to the other passenger aboard that flight.
Most of these names are unknown to society, except for the fifth passenger, Roberto Walker Clemente. The legendary Pittsburgh Pirates player and Pride of Puerto Rico was on a mission to Nicaragua. The tragedy has been well documented over the years, but the names of the other occupants has been hardly mentioned. They were simply identified as “four other passengers.”
Major Jerry Carroll Hill was 47 years old and the father of six children. His was the only body found, still strapped into the seat. Arthur Rivera, was president of Interstate Air Service Corp., which owned the plane. Not much else is known on the others, and that’s a damn shame. It makes you wonder, would even one Major League At Bat have given these “four other passengers” a profile?