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WFAA Rewind: The crash of Delta Flight 191 (8/2/85)

Sunday marks the 30th anniversary of the crash of Delta Flight 191 at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.
The tail section of Delta Air Lines Flight 191 after it crashed at DFW Airport on August 2, 1985.

Sunday marks the 30th anniversary of the crash of Delta Flight 191 at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

The Lockheed L-1011 jumbo jet was coming in for a landing on a rainy August 2, 1985 when — investigators say — it encountered a "microburst" that sent the aircraft careening along the ground north of the runway. It struck a car on Highway 114, killing its driver, then broke up in a fireball as the plane slammed into two large above-ground water tanks.

The crash killed 136 people on board and the motorist; 27 passengers and crew survived the impact.

You can relive the initial dramatic moments of the disaster at DFW in the clip below, which features WFAA reporters Dave Cassidy and Nann Goplerud providing their accounts of the tragedy from the scene, along with a witness who describes what he saw unfolding before him.

Here is another report from Brad Watson:

Memories of the crash are still fresh for WFAA viewers who posted their accounts on our Facebook page.

"My father was on that flight," Kirsten Monberg Gappelberg said. "Today we will convene with first responders at Founder's Plaza at 6 p.m. to remember that day."

"I remember Dixie Dunn, one of the senior flight attendants lost on the crash," wrote Linda Newman. "A beautiful soul."

"I was at the airport that day, with my two-year-old, picking up my husband on a flight that was supposed to land around the same time," Paula Cooper shared. "I'll never forget seeing the awful black smoke. People were parking in the middle of the road and running towards the crashed plane. I saw the crinkled up tanks on the north end of DFW that had been hit by the wings of the L-1011. I remember being absolutely stunned that anyone survived that awful crash."

Matt Lewis, who was working on the flight line for Delta that day, said the storm had blown luggage carts from the gate like they were child's toys.

"Later that evening, some of the other employees and I went to the crash site to volunteer," he wrote. "I was only 19 at the time, and I remember thinking that hell had ripped open and was right in front of me."

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