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Talk:Bremen (aircraft)

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Bremen is a Junkers W33 airplane that made the first successful Trans-Atlantic flight from East to West, leaving Baldonell, Ireland on April 12 and flying to Greenly Island, Canada, (about 1,200 miles from New York) arriving on April 14, 1928 after a flight fraught with difficult conditions and compass problems. The crew consisted of pilots Captain Hermann Koehl (or Köhl); their Navigator, Major James Fitzmaurice, and passenger Baron von Hunefeld. The Bremen belongs to the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan but is currently on display in a hangar at the Bremen Airport Museum where it has been completely restored. (REF.: Wir Holen die Bremen nach Bremen e.V.; Geschaftsstelle: Sogestrasse 70 - 28195 Bremen - Telefon 0421 - 309050) When the Bremen made a forced landing on Greenley Island in 1928, the first Canadian aircraft to reach the scene was piloted by Duke Schiller and the second machine was flown by the Canadian Transcontinental Airways Company's Chief Pilot - Romeo Vachon who arrived two days later with a group of media representatives. Both Schiller and Vachon were flying Fairchild FC-2W machines; G-CAIPQ (Schiller) and G-CAIP (Vachon). Gretta May Ferris, a nurse from Saint John NB who was posted at nearby Forteau's Grennfell Medical Station, travelled by dogsled some fifteen miles to attend to the crew's medical needs. She was the first to write the story that was picked up by the international media saying that the Bremen had landed and that the crew were safe. The most recent book on this subject is titled <<The Bremen>> by Fred W. Hotson; published by CANAV Books, 51 Balsam Ave., Toronto ON M4E 3B6; 1988. Source for Crew and Date changes: "Chronicle of Aviation", 1992, Published by JL International Publishing, Missouri

Merger proposal

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There is much more detail about the flight on the page dealing with Fitzmaurice (James Fitzmaurice#Bremen flight) - doesn't that belong here? --Todowd 13:01, 1 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

That seems like a good idea to me. Jlittlet 02:06, 23 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
[edit]

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