Brian Robson
Brian Robson (born c. 1946) is notable for having mailed himself in a crate from Melbourne, Australia to Los Angeles, California in the late 1960s.[1][2]
Travel
In 1965, Robson was in Australia and didn't have sufficient funds to travel back home to Cardiff, Wales. Inspired by the story of Reg Spiers, an Olympic javelin thrower who had performed a similar feat, Robson had his friends seal him in a crate that measured 36 × 30 × 38 inches and send him by post back to London. Supplies in the crate included: a hammer, a suitcase, a pillow, a litre of water, a flashlight, a book of Beatles songs, and an empty bottle.[3][4]
Robson spent 92 hours in the crate before officials intercepted him in Los Angeles, USA. He was then deported to London.[3]
Robson's plan had been to be shipped directly to London on a 36-hour Qantas flight from Sydney, but the connecting flight was full, and so the crate was left upside down for 22 hours on the tarmac until it was shipped freight by Pan Am to Los Angeles before being transferred on to London. Because the areas where the crate had been stored were not properly heated and the crate had at times been kept upside down, Robson suffered greatly on his four-day journey, at times even slipping in and out of consciousness.[3] It took him several days to recover in a hospital in Los Angeles.[4]
Robson settled down in his native Wales, retiring at the age of 60.[5] In 2021, he wrote a book about his experience called The Crate Escape.[6]
References
- ^ Hardingham-Gill, Tamara The Welshman who mailed himself home from Australia in a box, CNN Travel April 14, 2021
- ^ Russel, Molly Man posted himself from Australia to UK on Pan Am: seeks friend who nailed his crate shut, Simple Flying May 21, 2022
- ^ a b c Reynlods, Emma The teenage stowaway who nearly died when he mailed himself to London, News.com.au April 9, 2015
- ^ a b Murphy, Heather (2021-04-14). "A Man Who Shipped Himself in a Crate Wants to Find the Men Who Helped". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-06-12.
- ^ "Man seeks pals who once helped ship him around the world in a wood crate". The Island Packet. 30 April 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
- ^ "Man who was shipped from Australia by air mail reunites with Irish friend who helped him". IrishCentral.