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THE PERILS OF WINTER FLYING IN ENGLAND WHEN SUDDEN FOGS DESTROY VISIBILITY. Owing to a thick fog Flying-Officer N. H. Thompson, of the Royal Air Force, crashed when making a forced landing at Hampstead recently The machine just missed the tops of some trees and buried its nose in the ground, as shown in this picture. The pilot scrambled from the wreckage, his face covered with blood, calmly walked to the main road nearby and stopped a passing ambulance, which conveyed him to hospital.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19320416.2.160.28.4

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21159, 16 April 1932, Page 3 (Supplement)

Word Count
84

THE PERILS OF WINTER FLYING IN ENGLAND WHEN SUDDEN FOGS DESTROY VISIBILITY. Owing to a thick fog Flying-Officer N. H. Thompson, of the Royal Air Force, crashed when making a forced landing at Hampstead recently The machine just missed the tops of some trees and buried its nose in the ground, as shown in this picture. The pilot scrambled from the wreckage, his face covered with blood, calmly walked to the main road nearby and stopped a passing ambulance, which conveyed him to hospital. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21159, 16 April 1932, Page 3 (Supplement)

THE PERILS OF WINTER FLYING IN ENGLAND WHEN SUDDEN FOGS DESTROY VISIBILITY. Owing to a thick fog Flying-Officer N. H. Thompson, of the Royal Air Force, crashed when making a forced landing at Hampstead recently The machine just missed the tops of some trees and buried its nose in the ground, as shown in this picture. The pilot scrambled from the wreckage, his face covered with blood, calmly walked to the main road nearby and stopped a passing ambulance, which conveyed him to hospital. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21159, 16 April 1932, Page 3 (Supplement)

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