The Bermuda Triangle : the disappearance of Flight 19
(2018)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Albert Jack Publishing, 2018
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781386933076 (electronic bk.) MWT14507798, 1386933074 (electronic bk.) 14507798
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Try to See It from My Angle: The Bermuda Triangle What is it about this infamous stretch of ocean (and sky) that causes ships and planes to vanish without a trace? At ten past two in the afternoon of 5 December 1945, five US Navy Avenger torpedo bombers took off from the naval air station at Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The commander of Flight 19, Lieutenant Charles Taylor, had been assigned a routine two-hour training flight of fifteen men on a course that would take them out to sea sixty-six miles due east of the airbase, to the Hen and Chicken Shoals. There the squadron would carry out practice bombing runs, then fly due north for seventy miles before turning for a second time and heading back to base, 120 miles away. Their plotted flight plan formed a simple triangle, straightforward to execute, and Lieutenant Taylor and his four trainee pilots headed out into the clear blue sky over a calm Sargasso Sea. Even though everything seemed set fair, some of the crew were showing signs of anxiety. This was not unusual during a training flight over open water. Less usual was the fact that one of the fifteen crewmen had failed to show up for duty, claiming he had had a premonition that something strange would happen on that day and that he was too scared to fly. Read on

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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