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Donald Campbell's Bluebird could return to Coniston Water nearly 60 years after fatal crash
Legendary speed record breaker Donald Campbell's Bluebird could roar back to life next year - nearly six decades after it was destroyed in a fatal crash. The hydroplane, which disintegrated in 1967 as ...
LONDON (AP) — The famed jet boat Bluebird returned to the water Saturday for the first time since a 1967 crash that killed pilot Donald Campbell during a world speed-record attempt. Watched by ...
The Bluebird K7, the world's first successful jet-engined hydroplane and a multiple-record holder for speed on water, is back at home in Coniston, Cumbria, in the UK. Its road back home was long, ...
When it comes to Fridays, Donald Campbell would rather not. It was a Friday in 1960 on Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats when he climbed into his 4,250-h.p. Bluebird and became a helpless prisoner as the ...
The hydroplane, which set several water world speed records before its pilot was killed in a crash in 1967, has been on show at Coniston in the Lake District since last year. Now it has been announced ...
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