Friday, May 28, 2021

May 28, 1921. Tragedy, A Memorial Holiday, and Wind

 

May 28, 1921. An early disaster.

Showing both the rapid advance of air travel, as more people were able to fly, and in more comfort, than before, and that aircraft remained very much an unknown in some ways, the deadliest air accident up to that time occurred when a Curtiss Eagle of the U.S. Army's Air Service crashed in a severe thunderstorm at Morgantown, Maryland.

Curtis Eagle.

All seven occupants were killed.  The plane was serving as an air ambulance.

It was Memorial Day weekend, which reflected itself in the cover of The Literary Digest in the form of a Rockwell illustration of a parade.


The Saturday Evening Post, however, simply celebrated wind.


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