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Jul 19, 2025 · A car dealer named Malcolm Campbell and his 350-horsepower Sunbeam car named Blue Bird, hoped to use the seven miles of Pendine Sands in Carmarthenshire to break the …
Jul 27, 2015 · On July 25, 1925, Malcolm Campbell piloted a 350-horsepower Sunbeam automobile, nicknamed Blue Bird, to a two-way average of 150.87 miles per hour at Pendine Sands in the …
Sir Malcolm Campbell (born March 11, 1885 in Chiselhurst, Kent, England - died December 31, 1948) gained the world speed record on Land and on Water at various times during the 1920s and …
Major Sir Malcolm Campbell MBE (11 March 1885 – 31 December 1948) was a British racing motorist and motoring journalist. He gained the world speed record on land and on water at various times, …
Malcolm Campbell gave his first racing cars boring names before being captivated by the theme of Maeterlinck’s Symbolist operatic fantasy, The Blue Bird, in 1912. The pursuit of happiness, so …
On September 3, 1935, Sir Malcolm Campbell, at age fifty, piloted this last 'Blue Bird,' and set a land speed record of 301.13 mph at Bonneville. Due to timing and scoring problems, the speed …
Sir Malcolm Campbell broke the speed record another nine times in various 'Bluebird' cars powered by both Napier and Rolls Royce engines. These records were as follows : 3rd September 1935 …
On 3 September 1935, Campbell climbed into the Campbell-Railton-Rolls-Royce Blue Bird for an attempt on the LSR. Flying northeast across the open expanse of salt, he covered a mile in 11.83 …
Mar 24, 2021 · Sir Malcolm Campbell set 9 land speed records and 4 water speed records between 1924 and 1939 in a variety of aero-engined cars and powerboats all named 'Blue Bird'.
Front-engined land speed record car. The Campbell-Railton Blue Bird was Sir Malcolm Campbell 's final land speed record car. His previous Campbell-Napier-Railton Blue Bird of 1931 was rebuilt …
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