WebBYRD'S DIARY OF NORTH POLE FLIGHT FOUND IN UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES. COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Exactly 70 years after famed explorer. Admiral Richard E. Byrd claimed to have been the first to fly. over the North …
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Admiral Byrd’s Secret Diary - National War Council
WebAdmiral Byrd died in December of 1956. This was just after he finished his private diary about which he was sworn to secrecy by the United States Navy. The notes in that diary indicated that his seaplane exploratory journey to the north pole went off-course and entered a cavity in the Earth at the north Pole.
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Secret Diary of Admiral Byrd: Fact Or Fiction? - Media Monarchy
WebIn an article, “The Missing Secret Diary of Admiral Byrd: Fact or Fiction? “, Crenshaw asked two questions: “1) Did Admiral Byrd make a flight to the North Pole in February of 1947? (2) Is the so-called secret diary of Admiral Byrd that has been circulating…since the late 70s in fact a true account of that alleged flight?”
WebThe diary is part of an enormous (523 cubic feet) collection of historical materials documenting the life and career of Admiral Richard E. Byrd at The Ohio State University, which named its prestigious polar research center in his honor.
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To the Pole: The Diary and Notebook of Richard E. Byrd, 1925 …
WebBibliographic information. On May 9, 1926, Richard E. Byrd announced to the world that he and copilot Floyd Bennett were the first to fly an airplane over the North Pole. Documents published here...
WebThe 1996 release of Byrd's diary of the May 9, 1926, flight revealed erased (but still legible) sextant sights that sharply differ from Byrd's later June 22 typewritten official report to the National Geographic Society. Byrd took a sextant reading of the Sun at 7:07:10 GCT.
WebDocuments published here for the first time provide new insights into this most controversial accomplishment of Byrd’s career. To the Pole presents transcriptions of Byrd’s handwritten diary and notebook, which were discovered by Ohio State University archivist Raimund Goerler in 1996 when he was cataloging Byrd’s papers for the university.
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DIARY DISPUTES BYRD'S POLAR CLAIM - The Washington Post
WebMay 9, 1996 · The clues are in Byrd's long lost diary of the expedition, which an archivist at the center recently found in a mislabeled box of Byrd's memorabilia. The diary contains navigational...
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To the Pole: The Diary and Notebook of Richard E. Byrd, 1925-1927
WebTo the Pole: The Diary and Notebook of Richard E. Byrd, 1925-1927. Author: Byrd, Richard Evelyn, 1888-1957. Editor: Goerler, Raimund E. (Raimund Erhard), 1948-. Note: …
Webdiary discovered in the papers of Admiral Richard Byrd at The Ohio State University. The purposes of this presentation are to provide a brief overview of Byrd and the controversy, to discuss contradicting interpretations of the diary, and to iden* other important documents in Byrd's papers about the North Pole flight.