cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/6963678

Eighty years ago, five planes vanished during a training run off the Florida coast. A patrol plane sent to search for the men went missing, too, giving rise to a host of conspiracy theories

“I don’t know where we are,” a voice on the radio said. “We must have got lost after that last turn.”

This message was the first inkling that something was amiss with Flight 19, a routine United States Navy training run off the coast of Florida on December 5, 1945. In the confusing hours that followed, the five torpedo bombers’ radio transmissions grew fainter as their fuel supply dwindled. Soon, the men—a mix of Marines and naval aviators—were no longer able to communicate with land, and two naval patrol bombers were dispatched to search for them. A short time later, one of the rescue planes abruptly dropped off radio contact and disappeared, too.

In total, six aircraft carrying 27 men (14 from Flight 19 and 13 from the patrol bomber) vanished over the so-called Bermuda Triangle that day. No confirmed trace of them has ever been found. Eighty years later, Flight 19 remains one of aviation’s most notable mysteries—and where answers are elusive, legions of theories have emerged to fill in the blanks.

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