Box 43
Container
Contains 24 Results:
Weather/Fatal – Beechcraft 95, Feb. 18, 1960
File — Box: 43, Folder: 21
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection comprises the original research, reports, court cases, and correspondence documenting A. Howard Hasbrook’s career in crash injury research. It includes the studies he conducted at Cornell University, as well as research and investigations carried out for various other organizations. Hasbrook endeavored to make both airplane and automobile crashes less lethal. His analysis led him to become an early advocate of seat belts for both airplanes and automobiles, and he encouraged...
Dates:
Feb. 18, 1960
Undetermined/Serious – Cessna 182, Feb. 25, 1960
File — Box: 43, Folder: 22
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection comprises the original research, reports, court cases, and correspondence documenting A. Howard Hasbrook’s career in crash injury research. It includes the studies he conducted at Cornell University, as well as research and investigations carried out for various other organizations. Hasbrook endeavored to make both airplane and automobile crashes less lethal. His analysis led him to become an early advocate of seat belts for both airplanes and automobiles, and he encouraged...
Dates:
Feb. 25, 1960
Weather/Minor – Mooney MK20, Feb. 26, 1960
File — Box: 43, Folder: 23
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection comprises the original research, reports, court cases, and correspondence documenting A. Howard Hasbrook’s career in crash injury research. It includes the studies he conducted at Cornell University, as well as research and investigations carried out for various other organizations. Hasbrook endeavored to make both airplane and automobile crashes less lethal. His analysis led him to become an early advocate of seat belts for both airplanes and automobiles, and he encouraged...
Dates:
Feb. 26, 1960
Medical/Fatal – Aeronca 7 AC, Mar. 6, 1960
File — Box: 43, Folder: 24
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection comprises the original research, reports, court cases, and correspondence documenting A. Howard Hasbrook’s career in crash injury research. It includes the studies he conducted at Cornell University, as well as research and investigations carried out for various other organizations. Hasbrook endeavored to make both airplane and automobile crashes less lethal. His analysis led him to become an early advocate of seat belts for both airplanes and automobiles, and he encouraged...
Dates:
Mar. 6, 1960