Following a take off from the Houston Executive Airport on Tuesday morning, a plane carrying 22 people crashed , officials said. Save for one minor injury, all the passengers and crew were removed safely, Waller County Judge Trey Duhon reported via Facebook. 

“The information we have at this time indicates that the plane did not attain altitude at the end of the runway and went across Morton Road, coming to a rest in the field just north of the airport, where it caught on fire,” the post said. 

The McDonnell Douglas MD-87 “rolled through a fence and caught fire in a field” just after 10 a.m. while attempting to depart, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said in a statement.

While no one was killed, two have been injured and are admitted in a hospital, the Independent reported. The youngest passenger, according to the officials, was reportedly a 10-year-old. 

According to the Federal Aviation Administration, “the plane smashed through a fence and caught fire in a field while departing Houston Executive Airport shortly after 10 am”.

Utility company CenterPoint Energy said that the “plane crash took out an overhead power line, causing an outage to more than 1,800 customers”.

The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) are going to investigate, with the NTSB as the lead agency. 

Waller County Office of Emergency Management took to Twitter to share that the crash involved an “aircraft that was taking off from the Airport heading north.” 

In the latest footage, first responders can be spotted at the site where the plane likely stopped across a dirt path and caught fire. It can also be seen in the terrifying footage that the firefighters attacked the huge blaze, while flames and black smoke kept rising from the wreckage to form a horrifying cloud.