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Word Gems 

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British Airship R.101

 


 

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#51 on October 5, 1930, during a flight over France, the British airship R.101 went down.

Passangers and crew might have survived what should have been a gentle landing, but the airship was inflated with hydrogen which ignited.

Two days later, captain of the airship, Carmichael Irwin, offered an offical statement via psychic medium.

 

 

A detailed account of this catastrophe and Captain Irwin’s testimony can be found in the book “The Hereafter Trilogy” by Miles Edward Allen.

The essential facts of this incident, in very brief format, are these:

Irwin spoke in technical language concerning problems with the airship’s engines. He employed jargon which would have been unknown to the medium or almost anyone else.

Later, when Irwin’s report was reviewed by British air-ministry officials, even they were unfamiliar with some of the technical language, requiring them to search through specs-and-design papers for R.101 to determine what Irwin was talking about.

The highly obscure and abstruse nature of Irwin’s technical report would indicate it more than highly unlikely, and nearly impossible, that the psychic-medium involved would have been privy to this airship techno-jargon - thus suggesting that the real Captain Irwin was in fact offering a bona fide personal account concerning the cause of the crash.

 

Dr. Keith Parsons reviews the evidence and uncovers little-known information.

See the Documentary

 

 

 

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