
Campbell's Bluebird back on Coniston Water almost 60 years after fatal record attempt
Campbell's Bluebird back on Coniston Water8 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google The jet engines fire up on Coniston Water once moreDonald Campbell's restored Bluebird craft has been fired up on Coniston...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. Campbell's Bluebird back on Coniston Water8 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google The jet engines fire up on Coniston Water once moreDonald Campbell's restored Bluebird craft has been fired up on Coniston Water for the first time since the daredevil pilot's fatal crash on the lake almost 60 years ago. He had been attempting to push his world speed record past 300mph (480km/h) when the jet-engined hydroplane, called K7, somersaulted on 4 January 1967. Its mangled wreckage was recovered in 2001 with the craft handed to Coniston's Ruskin Museum two years ago following the settlement of an ownership row with Bill Smith, the engineer who led its rebuild.
Campbell's daughter Gina said she was "blown away" to see it running on the lake once more. Getty ImagesSpray shot into the air as the jet engine was startedIn total, Campbell set seven water speed world records piloting Bluebird, including four on Coniston Water, between 1955 and 1964. He achieved a further world best on land in 1964 - becoming the only man to set fastest times on water and land in the same year.
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At about 14:15 BST, the restored craft was lowered into the water ahead of safety checks on the first day of a week-long event which is set to see several runs at up to 150mph (240km/h). About 90 minutes later the jet engine was fired up. 'Tear in my eye'Gina Campbell said: "To see it and hear it… I never thought I'd live to see the day.
"It's thanks to so many people. It's just been amazing. For once, I'm speechless.
"Speaking from the water's edge as Bluebird was moved into position, Donald's nephew Don Wales said: "What a day. To see the boat on the lake again, it's utterly magnificent. "You can feel the love and the warmth of people here wanting to see it.
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"We've got a few thousand people here today, it's glorious at Coniston. "As soon as it touched the water, there was a tear in my eye. It really was quite a moment and the minute's silence was very fitting.
"Without the restoration team and a lot of other people we wouldn't be here today. "The week's events are intended to mark what will be the 70th anniversary of Donald setting the first of his records on the lake in September 1956. Australian Dave Warby, son of the late Ken Warby MBE who set the current water speed record of 317.
11 km/h) in 1978, is at the controls - with Campbell's teddy bear mascot Mr Whoppit with him in the cockpit. Getty ImagesOnlookers cheered as the hydroplane was lowered into the lakeJeff Carroll, chairman of the Ruskin Museum which owns Bluebird and displays it in a dedicated wing, said it marked the "next chapter" in the machine's story. "All this started for me as a kid brought up in Coniston, reading books on rainy Sunday afternoons about Campbell and this mythical boat that was in the lake somewhere.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





