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Hancock John Truscott

Name:
John Truscott Hancock
Rank:
Chief Machinist's Mate
Serial Number:
Unit:
U.S. Rigid Air Detachment
Date of Death:
1921-08-24
State:
Cemetery:
City of London Cem. and Crematorium, England
Plot:
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
Comments:

When John Truscott Hancock was born on March 14, 1890, in West Ham, Essex, England, his father, John, was 35 and his mother, Ellen, was 30. He had three brothers and four sisters. John served as a Chief Machinist's Mate in the US Navy aboard R38/ZR-2 during World War I.

CMM Hancock was killed when the experimental dirigible R-38 broke up and exploded in England on it 4th and final test flight prior to being purchased by the U.S. Navy from the British who built the airship. The intentions were for America to utilize this ship during WWI and become the main means of transportation in the future. A total of 44 men lost there lives 17 were Americans. Witnesses said it appeared to break in the middle and the front half exploded, the tail end fell in the Humber River, Hull, England, there were 4 survivors pulled from it. One being the pilot.

Cause of Explosion: Zepplins fly on hydrogen and as a result of their highly flammable lifting gas, it exploded over the river with thousands of spectators on the shore watching this amazing aircraft take off. No one on the shore-side were injured.

CMM Hancock is now buried in the City of London Cemetery and Crematorium, Newham, London Borough of Newham, Greater London, England.

Source of information: www.findagrave.com, www.ancestry.com
Photo source: www.britishairshippeople.org.uk