68 people killed when American Eagle plane bound for O'Hare crashes in an Indiana field
68 people killed when American Eagle plane bound for O'Hare crashes in an Indiana field
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68 people killed when American Eagle plane bound for O'Hare crashes in an Indiana field

🕒︎ 2025-10-31

Copyright Chicago Tribune

68 people killed when American Eagle plane bound for O'Hare crashes in an Indiana field

Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Oct. 31, according to the Tribune’s archives. Is an important event missing from this date? Email us. Halloween weather in Chicago: The warmest, coldest, snowiest and wettest since 1871 Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago) High temperature: 84 degrees (1950) Low temperature: 23 degrees (1873) Precipitation: 2.26 inches (1994) Snowfall: 3.4 inches (2019) 1895: An earthquake with a 6.8-magnitude was centered in Charleston, Missouri, but felt by Illinoisians. No one was killed and no substantial buildings collapsed. 1911: The cornerstone was laid for Medinah Temple “at the mystic hour of midnight.” It opened the following year. 1936: Coach Bernie Bierman’s Minnesota Golden Gophers had played 28 games without defeat and were gunning for a third straight Big Ten title. But captain Steve Reid, linebacker Fred Vanzo and halfback Steve Toth led a Northwestern upset in Dyche Stadium. Vanzo’s linebacking held Gophers star Andy Uram in check. Toth plunged 1 yard for the game’s only score. The Wildcats went on to win their last Big Ten title before the 1995 and 1996 seasons. 1949: Silent film star Colleen Moore’s Fairy Castle went on public exhibition at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry, where it remains on display today. 1974: The Chicago Sting, named after the popular movie “The Sting,” was born. Chicagoan Lee B. Stern paid $250,000 for a franchise team with the North American Soccer League. The Sting beat the New York Cosmos 1-0 in Toronto for the North American Soccer League championship in 1981. It was the city’s first professional sports championship in 18 years. They won it again in 1984. The team folded in 1988. 1983: Chicago Bears founder/coach/player George Halas died at age 88. “He was an immortal man who made the National Football League,” said former Bears quarterback Sid Luckman, who was with Halas until just before his death at 8:25 p.m. “I just didn’t have the heart to be there when he died.” 1993: The Chicago Transit Authority opened a new “L” line from the Loop to Chicago’s Midway International Airport — the first completely new “L” line since the Dan Ryan Line (today’s South Side Red Line) opened in 1969, and the first time the “L” was extended into a part of the city previously not served since 1984, when today’s Blue Line was extended to O’Hare International Airport. 1994: An American Eagle ATR-72 crashed in an Indiana field 60 miles southeast of Chicago while in a holding pattern to land at O’Hare airport. All 68 people aboard died. The preliminary investigation indicated the crew lost control after ice built up on the wing behind the de-icing devices. The accident caused the temporary withdrawal of that type of aircraft from service in northern climates, until the wing icing problem could be solved. 2018: Chicago native Derrick Rose scored a career-high 50 points in the Minnesota Timberwolves’ 128-125 win over the Utah Jazz in Minneapolis. Rose became the fourth player that season to score at least 50, joining Blake Griffin, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson. Want more vintage Chicago? Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago’s past.

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