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(Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty) Wiberg dove in this area to find the B-26 Marauder.
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drew a line and you swam that line, eventually you'd find something, right?" said Wiberg.Ĭable Beach in Nassau, Bahamas, is shown. Aided by a reference to where a building was located, Wiberg's focus narrowed. While the crash report offered up latitude and longitude, Wiberg's dive in the area turned up unsuccessful.Įyewitnesses had been consistent that the plane crashed 400 yards (366 metres) from shore. He was dejected, but became more determined than ever to find the plane flown by O'Neill and Wood. You obviously don't know what you're doing,'" said Wiberg. "My colleagues in Australia and other places rejected me and said, 'You've wasted our time. It wasn't even the plane he had spotted in 1985. They told him he'd found the remnants of a Beechcraft plane, not the B-26 Marauder flown by O'Neill and Wood. He thought he found it, but his hopes were dashed when aviation experts rebuked him. (Submitted by Eric Wiberg)Įngulfed in personal turmoil, he set out to find the plane. One of those books is Bahamas in World War II: A Military Chronology 1939-1945.Įric Wiberg is shown during one of his dives looking for the B-26 Marauder. Wiberg is an author and historian who has published more than a dozen books. "I was mesmerized," he said. "Basically, what the hell is a wheel doing on a reef, you know? It really caught my imagination and that question stuck with me." While out on a friend's powerboat In 1985, he and his best friend came across the wheel from a plane. He found solace in diving and became fixated on finding something he spotted decades ago as a teen. A nephew who lives in the Bahamas died in a car accident and his mom died after an eight-year battle with cancer. He frequently visits the Bahamas and spent time there growing up. The discovery was thanks to Eric Wiberg, a determined American who lives in Boston. The Toronto man died in a plane crash off the coast of Nassau, Bahamas, on Oct. John (Jack) Wood is shown in a photo, circa 1942. So when this started, this has gone from a little bit of family lore to, like, this is real." "My mom didn't like to talk about it," said Green. "She was always very upset. Her uncle, Jack Wood, was the other person on the plane. The discovery of the plane also provided answers to Joanne Green of Guelph, Ont. "They didn't talk a lot about it in the family, just that he'd gone down, didn't know the circumstances or why they had not been able to find them." "It was interesting to hear what happened," said Tom O'Neill, who lives in Villa Nova, Ont. He was one of two people to die after a mechanical failure on a B-26 Marauder on Oct. O'Neill's uncle, Maurice (pronounced Morris) O'Neill was from Halifax. The plane was located off the coast of Nassau, Bahamas. The email was from a man who claimed to have found a plane, the one O'Neill's uncle was in when it crashed during the Second World War. Tom O'Neill didn't know what to think when he got an unexpected email last fall.