Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1945: July 10, Thomas Arthur Garner, AMM3, USN, along with eleven other crew members, was lost at sea in a US Navy PBM3S patrol seaplane, Bu. No.6545, Sqd VPB2-OTU#3, in the Bermuda Triangle. They left Naval Air Station, Banana River, Florida, at 7:07 p.m. on July 9, 1945, for a radar training flight to Great Exuma, Bahamas.
While sitting at anchor in Red Bay bay with other whaling ships, she broke her moorings during a storm, struck an island and sank with a full load of 1,000 casks of oil. 51°43′55″N 56°25′32″W / 51.73194°N 56.42556°W / 51.73194; -56.42556 ( San Juan de
Sometimes connected to the Atlantis story is the submerged rock formation known as the Bimini Road off the island of Bimini in the Bahamas, which is in the Triangle by some definitions. Followers of the purported psychic Edgar Cayce take his prediction that evidence of Atlantis would be found in 1968 as referring to the discovery of the Bimini ...
A brand-new Disney cruise ship rushed to the aid of a catamaran taking on water in the Atlantic on Sunday and plucked four people to safety, authorities said.. The 50-foot Serenity was 265 miles ...
A Disney cruise ship rescued four people from a sinking 50-foot catamaran approximately 265 miles off the shores of Bermuda on Sunday, 10 November. The US Coast Guard said they coordinated with ...
Ship Year Possible or Last Known Location USS: Albany: 1854: somewhere in Caribbean Sea [16] Cerisoles: 1918: Minesweeper built for French Navy, lost in heavy weather in Lake Superior along with Inkerman in November 1918. [13] USS: Cyclops: 1918: somewhere between Barbados and Baltimore, Maryland [17] Danube: 1892: somewhere between Guadeloupe ...
In other cruise news, the world’s largest ship - the Royal Caribbean’s “Icon of the Seas” - will be setting sail on 27 January. With more than 18 passenger decks, seven swimming pools, 40 ...
Eventually, Union attacks were also being made along the Bermuda coast, where Union man-of-war ships often seized neutral vessels and their cargoes. This outraged Lewis Heyliger, who was appointed by the Treasury of the Confederacy as head of the "depository" of Confederate funds in Nassau, Bahamas .