There was another
item on BBC» local news at the weekend, about this:
Sutton Wick air crash, 60 years on
5 March 2017 Last updated at 00:08 GMT
A Blackburn Beverley aircraft crashed in Sutton Wick, now in Oxfordshire, on 5 March 1957.
The crash killed 15 members of the RAF▸ , two civilians (on the ground) and a number of police dogs.
Another man, badly burned in the accident, later killed himself.
I'd not heard of that before, and I think it must be off the beginning of the kind of "cuttings library" that gets searched when a new news item comes in. Zeebrugge is certainly in that library, but another one that is too old or too foreign is the sinking of the Skagerrak on 7 September 1966.
That's my near miss - I'd crossed from Norway to Denmark in August with a school party. It was pretty shocking to realise that a ship like that could be lost in a summer storm.
This was a brand new merry-go-round ferry, with a door/ramp at the stern only, but it foundered in a storm bad enough to batter in that door. Despite that, only one or two died*, and 98 passengers and 46 crew were rescued, which probably explains why it is not well-known. Most were picked up by Danish Air Force Sikorsky S61-As (our Sea Kings), also new in service, so this was notable as one of the first successful offshore mass rescues.
*Reports disagree, and there is some uncertainty about the manifest.