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re: Pictures from days gone by....
Posted on 11/1/22 at 7:45 am to bayourougebengal
Posted on 11/1/22 at 7:45 am to bayourougebengal
Jeannie's bottle


Posted on 11/1/22 at 8:13 am to mauser
Oh, Lord! Barbara Eden was gorgeous!
Posted on 11/1/22 at 8:29 am to Doormat
quote:
On Saturday, July 28, 1945, Lieutenant Colonel William F. Smith Jr. was piloting a B-25 Mitchell bomber on a routine personnel transport mission from Bedford Army Air Field in Massachusetts to Newark Metropolitan Airport in New Jersey.[2][3][4] Smith asked for clearance to land, but he was advised of zero visibility.[5] Proceeding anyway, he became disoriented by the fog and turned right instead of left after passing the Chrysler Building.[6] At 9:40 a.m., the aircraft crashed into the north side of the Empire State Building, between the 78th and 80th floors, making an 18-by-20-foot (5.5 m × 6.1 m) hole in the building[7] into the offices of the War Relief Services and the National Catholic Welfare Council. One engine shot through the south side opposite the impact, flew as far as the next block, dropped 900 feet (270 m), landed on the roof of a nearby building and caused a fire that destroyed a penthouse art studio. The other engine and part of the landing gear fell down an elevator shaft. The resulting fire was extinguished in 40 minutes. The Empire State Building fire is the highest structural fire to be brought under control by firefighters.

Posted on 11/1/22 at 9:35 am to nuwaydawg
Those things could put an eye out 
Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:42 pm to Kafka
1913 Circus Train wreck - the engineer of an empty passenger train plowed his train into the back of a stopped circus train - killing at least 56. Many were trapped and were slowly burned alive. The debris is not from the clean up, it is what was left of 3 sleeping cars.

quote:
After a fire broke out, people trapped in the burning wreckage did beg to be put out of their misery, to be spared the agony of burning to death. But there were no mercy killings.

Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:44 pm to chinhoyang
quote:
the engineer of an empty passenger train plowed his train into the back of a stopped circus train
probably drunk and/or stoned, railroad engineers are what started all of the random drug and alcohol testing in DOT jobs
Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:48 pm to chinhoyang
1-15-1953: The crack "Federal Express" train approaches the main station in Washington D.C. Engineer hits the brakes ... nothing. Hits the emergency brakes - nothing. Train is a runaway that smashes into the main concourse. The floor collapses into the large basement. Miraculously, no one killed.
[/img]
[/img] Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:51 pm to chinhoyang
WWII troop train crash, no one to this days knows how many troops were killed.
"Telescoping," where one car goes through another, was a gruesome way to die.

"Telescoping," where one car goes through another, was a gruesome way to die.

This post was edited on 11/1/22 at 1:51 pm
Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:53 pm to 777Tiger
quote:
probably drunk and/or stoned, railroad engineers are what started all of the random drug and alcohol testing in DOT jobs
A drunk Cotton Belt Railroad crew derailed their freight train into a big swamp - their girlfriends were in the cab "operating" the train.
This reminded me of the Russian airliner where the pilot let his kids "fly" the plane, resulting in a crash that killed everyone.
Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:57 pm to chinhoyang
quote:
This reminded me of the Russian airliner where the pilot let his kids "fly" the plane, resulting in a crash that killed everyone.
since the statute of limitations have expired and I have retired, rumor has it that my 7 year old (at the time,) son has flown a 757 and my wife has flown a 777
Posted on 11/1/22 at 1:57 pm to chinhoyang
1912, San Antonio: damaged steam locomotive is being worked on when the boiler explodes. 25 people killed, many more injured. Huge parts were flung in the air, some landing as far away as 7 city blocks.


Posted on 11/1/22 at 2:10 pm to chinhoyang
Camelback locomotives - with the cab on each side of the locomotive - were eventually outlawed. If a siderod on the locomotive detached (which wasn't rare for steam locomotives), it would sweep upwards, ravaging the cab. It was a violent, unspeakable way of dying.


Posted on 11/1/22 at 2:12 pm to 777Tiger
I would imagine it happens more often than one would think. The Russian crash involved a lot of bad cockpit management.
Posted on 11/1/22 at 2:56 pm to chinhoyang
Throw up a hand if you pedaled around your neighborhood with no regard for the inevitable shin destruction

Posted on 11/1/22 at 3:36 pm to Kafka
Obviously not YOUR spelling, Kafka, but
"HOMOCIDAL"?
Is that when you only kill gay people?
Posted on 11/1/22 at 4:04 pm to nes2010
A little more info on the Empire State building plane crash..
quote:
Between 50 and 60 sightseers were on the 86th floor observation deck when the crash happened. Fourteen people were killed: Colonel Smith, Staff Sergeant Christopher Domitrovich, and Navy Aviation Machinist's Mate Albert Perna, who was hitching a ride, and eleven civilians in the building.[1] Perna's body was not found until two days later, when search crews discovered that it had entered an elevator shaft and fallen to the bottom. The other two crewmen were burned beyond recognition.[8] Elevator operator Betty Lou Oliver was thrown from her elevator car on the 80th floor and suffered severe burns. First aid workers placed her on another elevator car to transport her to the ground floor, but the cables supporting that elevator had been damaged in the incident, and it fell 75 stories, ending up in the basement.[9] Oliver survived the fall due to the softening cushion of air created by the falling elevator car within this elevator shaft, however she suffered a broken pelvis, back and neck when rescuers found her amongst the rubble.[10] This remains the world record for the longest survived elevator fall.[6]
Despite the damage and deaths, the building was open for business on many floors on the next Monday morning, less than 48 hours later. The crash spurred the passage of the long-pending Federal Tort Claims Act of 1946, as well as the insertion of retroactive provisions into the law, allowing people to sue the government for the accident.[10]
Posted on 11/1/22 at 5:18 pm to Athis
quote:
Elevator operator Betty Lou Oliver was thrown from her elevator car on the 80th floor and suffered severe burns. First aid workers placed her on another elevator car to transport her to the ground floor, but the cables supporting that elevator had been damaged in the incident, and it fell 75 stories, ending up in the basement.[9] Oliver survived the fall due to the softening cushion of air created by the falling elevator car within this elevator shaft, however she suffered a broken pelvis, back and neck when rescuers found her amongst the rubble.

Posted on 11/1/22 at 5:36 pm to BuckyCheese
That story reminds me of this old meme....


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