The legendary Bluebird K7 water speed record boat has made an emotional return to Coniston Water, 59 years after the devastating 1967 crash that killed Donald Campbell ...
Earlier this week Bluebird K7 returned to Coniston Water for the first time since her accident on January 4th, 1967 ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Watch the moment the record-breaking hydroplane returns to Coniston Water Donald Campbell's Bluebird K7 has returned and run on ...
Campbell, who had set a total of eight world speed records on land and water in the 1950s and 60s, was trying to break 300mph (480 km/h) on 4 January 1967 when the craft somersaulted and sank.
Ahead of Bluebird's return to Coniston Water, Donald Campbell's final record attempt is remembered.
"Technical issues" have scuppered a planned higher speed run of Donald Campbell's restored Bluebird craft on Coniston Water. The hydroplane, used to set seven water speed world records in the 1950s ...
Journalist Christopher Sharp travelled nearly 300 miles to see a 300mph boat take her second tentative steps onto Coniston ...
Throughout the chronicles of motoring and motorsport heritage, numerous illustrious names leap from the pages. Ferrari, Renault, Maserati, Porsche, represent just a handful. Britain boasts its own ...
The restored hydroplane returns to the lake where its record-breaking pilot was killed in 1967.
Brantwood, which belonged to Victorian writer and artist John Ruskin, looks out on to Coniston Water and the nearby village ...
Donald Campbell set seven water-speed world records, including four on Coniston Water, between 1955 and 1964 Donald Campbell's restored Bluebird is soon to power across Coniston Water for the first ...