ID | #1532012599 |
Added | Thu, 19/07/2018 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Fact
|
Initial data
In 1932, German newspaper reporter J. Bernard Hutton and his colleague, photographer Joachim Brandt, were assigned to do a story about the shipyard Hamburg-Altona. After they went on a tour with the head, heard the roar in the air from airplanes.
At first they thought it was teaching, but this idea was quickly dispelled when around began to explode bombs, and the roar of anti-aircraft fire filled the air. The sky quickly darkened, and they understood what was at the center of a full-scale air RAID. They quickly got into their car and drove away from the shipyard back to Hamburg.
However, when they left the area, the sky seemed bright. At the shipyard there was no damage from bombs, no aircraft in the sky.
Photographs taken by Brandt during the attack, showed nothing unusual. In 1943 the British Royal air force attacked and destroyed the shipyard - just as Hutton and Brandt had experienced it 11 years ago.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Original news
In 1932, German newspaper reporter J. Bernard Hutton and his colleague, photographer Joachim Brandt, were assigned to do a story on the Hamburg-Altona shipyards. After being given a tour by a shipyard executive, the two newspapermen were leaving when they heard the drone of overhead aircraft. They at first thought is was a practice drill, but that notion was quickly dispelled when bombs began exploding all around and the roar of anti-aircraft gunfire filled the air. The sky quickly darkened and they were in the middle of a full-blown air raid. They quickly got in their car and drove away from the shipyard back toward Hamburg. As they left the area, however, the sky seemed to brighten and they again found themselves in the light of a calm, ordinary late afternoon. They looked back at the shipyards, and there was no destruction, no bomb-induced inferno they had just left, no aircraft in the sky. The photos Brandt had taken during the attack showed nothing unusual. It wasn’t until 1943 that the British Royal Air Force attacked and destroyed the shipyard – just as Hutton and Brandt had experienced it 11 years earlier.
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