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Airship Roma Disaster in Hampton Roads, The

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In March 1921, Major John G. Thornell and his crew were detailed to Italy to procure a new experimental airship for the United States Army Air Service. Stationed at Langley Field in Hampton, the ROMA never lived up to expectations despite being heralded as the future of military innovation. Tragically, it crashed and erupted in a ball of fire in 1922, claiming the lives of thirty-four of the brave men aboard. Author Nancy E. Sheppard reveals the forgotten, harrowing story of one of the last great airships and those who sacrificed for the promise of a new era in aviation.

275 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 25, 2016

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About the author

Nancy E. Sheppard

5 books2 followers
Nancy E. Sheppard is a historian, nonfiction author, and lecturer from Yorktown, Virginia. She is the author of four books that discuss different aspects of the history of her native Tidewater, Virginia. She has been nominated three times for the Virginia Literary Award in the category of nonfiction. Ms. Sheppard has had the honor to lecture at a variety of locations, institutions, and before many prominent organizations.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Shrike58.
1,456 reviews25 followers
February 26, 2022
Although this booklet wound up being a major advance in my understanding of the destruction of the "Roma," which always seemed like an enigmatic event to me, I can't say that it was an unalloyed pleasure. Part of the problem is that Sheppard mostly wants to talk about the crew, and she was able to get enough input from their descendants that this is a good story; even if I think that the author goes a little too far in reconstructing conversations. However, the big plus is that I have never seen so many images of the "Roma," which greatly helped my imagination as to the scale of the vessel, and how she worked.

Apart from a bit of dramatic overreach, my main issue with this book might had been a question as to what was really going on here: Why was Col. Billy Mitchell so determined to acquire an airship that the Italian authorities already seemed to regard as a "white elephant." Turns out that Mitchell was looking at airships for long-range early warning, suggesting that there was an incipient inter-service airship race brewing. Further, considering how poorly the U.S. Army Air Service apparently maintained the "Roma" (its envelope apparently badly needed replacement from Day One of U.S. acquisition of the airship), one wonders if the accusations of incompetence that got Mitchell court-martialed encompassed both Army and Navy airships. At the very least it's food for thought.
Profile Image for Linda Anderson.
954 reviews16 followers
May 15, 2019
I had only heard of this 1922 disaster and had not been able to locate information on it until I found thus book. The author did a wonderful job in researching and documenting theRoma. Also, the pictures were fascinating. The writing flowed and thoroughly kept my interest.
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