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Post by hi224 on Sept 21, 2020 20:10:33 GMT
any you can think of at all?.
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Post by mecano04 on Sept 28, 2020 23:11:02 GMT
Richard Colvin COx?
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Post by hi224 on Sept 29, 2020 7:26:32 GMT
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Post by forca84 on Oct 11, 2020 1:16:26 GMT
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Post by clusium on Oct 11, 2020 1:25:04 GMT
Pretty much the stuff that took place in the Bermuda Triangle.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Oct 11, 2020 1:42:40 GMT
USS Cyclops disappeared in WWI. It was the largest ship to disappear in the Bermuda Triangle.....but what I didn't know until a few days ago is that two of her sister ships disappeared in WWII, on the same route.
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Post by hi224 on Oct 11, 2020 16:31:18 GMT
USS Cyclops disappeared in WWI. It was the largest ship to disappear in the Bermuda Triangle.....but what I didn't know until a few days ago is that two of her sister ships disappeared in WWII, on the same route. What do yoi think happened.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Oct 11, 2020 16:38:20 GMT
USS Cyclops disappeared in WWI. It was the largest ship to disappear in the Bermuda Triangle.....but what I didn't know until a few days ago is that two of her sister ships disappeared in WWII, on the same route. What do yoi think happened. I don't know. I'm completely baffled. If the ships had been torpedoed by subs there would have been a record of it. One suggestion about the Cyclops is that there was a mutiny against the unpopular German-born captain. The ship was also transporting German POWs. If true it would spoil the US Navy's perfect no-mutiny record. At least the fate of the fourth ship of the class is no mystery. USS Jupiter was converted into the first American aircraft carrier and renamed USS Langley. Just a training carrier really. Before the Second World War began she was converted to a seaplane tender and sunk by the Japanese at Darwin in 1942.
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