42 years ago, a B-52 bomber crashed into Square Top Mountain, killing 7 crew

The view looking down from Square Top Mountain near Gunlock Reservoir in Washington County, March 27.

The view looking down from Square Top Mountain near Gunlock Reservoir in Washington County, March 27. (Nick Fiala, St. George News)


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GUNLOCK, Washington County — It was supposed to be just another training mission.

On Monday, April 11, 1983, a B-52G identified as LURE 75 and its companion, LURE 76, were set to depart from Robins Air Force Base, 18 miles southeast of Macon, Georgia. The scheduled takeoff time was 8:45 a.m.

Their route would take them west across the country to join combat training exercises near Nellis Air Force Base in southern Nevada — a vast range used for simulated war games.

On the way, they would pass over southern Utah, where the rumble of B-52s overhead was a familiar sound during the "Red Flag" and "Green Flag" exercises tied to America's broader Cold War-era military preparedness program.

In a 2021 article, St. George News reporter David Louis described the mission as multifaceted, involving a cell departure — both planes taking off together — followed by a join-up over Oklahoma City. The crews were set to practice formation flying, high-altitude contingency training, low-level navigation and terrain avoidance, simulated weapons delivery, and threat evasion.

But this was no ordinary aircraft.

Read the full story at St. George News.

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