![]() |
|
Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
20,000 feet fall w/ no parachute
Just found this on the Web:
"Alan Magee was a ball turret gunner on an American B-17 bomber that was shot up and began spinning out of control over France on Jan. 3, 1943. Magee's parachute was unusable, but he jumped anyway, losing consciousness as he fell about 20,000 feet. He crashed through the glass skylight of the St. Nazaire train station and suffered severe injuries. Yet Magee recovered, enjoying backpacking until his death at age 84. Magee's 4-mile plunge was well-documented, but it's not clear how he survived. Some believe the angle of the skylight deflected his fall." I have heard of a Lancaster crewman who bailed out w/out a parachute and landed in the snow relatively uninjured. Or the Yugoslav stewardess who survived a similar fall when her airliner suffered a bomb attack in mid air. |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Which Allied unit made the attack? | Mikael Olrog | Allied and Soviet Air Forces | 8 | 31st January 2010 23:20 |
Bomber Command Parachute Use | Jim Oxley | Allied and Soviet Air Forces | 2 | 19th April 2009 18:48 |
Luftwaffe losses, Rhubarb opeartion 19/09/1941 | Bernard | Luftwaffe and Axis Air Forces | 3 | 20th November 2008 01:25 |
Thunderbolts and Mustangs versus the Jagdwaffe (split topic) | Ruy Horta | Allied and Soviet Air Forces | 98 | 9th August 2007 16:22 |
German parachute ID please | Empiricist | Luftwaffe and Axis Air Forces | 0 | 6th May 2007 10:22 |