Tahoma National Cemetery Unveiled Our Newest Monument 

Greg Barrowman worked for many years to have the people of this flight memorialized somehow. He is a resident of Kent Washington and his older brother was on the flight. Approximately 75 people attended the dedication ceremony on June 3rd, 2023 at Tahoma National Cemetery. Many were family or friends of the passengers and crew.

Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 293 was an American military charter operated on 3 June 1963 by a Northwest Orient Airlines Douglas DC-7C registered N290 which crashed into the sea off the coast of Alaska. All 101 crew and passengers on board were killed.

Flight 293 was chartered by the Military Air Transport Service of the United States Air Force to carry 95 servicemen and their families from McChord Air Force Base in Washington state to Elmendorf Air Force Base in Alaska.[1] The DC-7 departed McChord at 07:52 Pacific Standard Time.[1] The last radio contact with the plane was at 10:06, when the crew requested a change of flight level.[1] When nothing more had been heard for more than an hour, a search for the aircraft was begun at 11:16.[1] It was not until 19:22 that floating debris was seen 182.5 miles (293.7 km) WSW of Annette Island, Alaska.

Approximately 1,500 pounds of wreckage was recovered, including life vests still encased in their plastic containers and extremely deformed seat frames.[2] None of the bodies of the crew or passengers were ever recovered