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Chuck9788 06-18-2025 10:43 AM

First Transatlantic flights
 
Charles Lindbergh did not make the first transatlantic flight on the “Spirit of St Louis” in 1927. His made the first “solo” flight.The first flight across the Atlantic was flown by John Alcock and Arthur Brown in 1919 from New Foundland Canada to Dublin Ireland. The plane crashed in a bog 20 miles off course.

The first US President to fly was Franklin Roosevelt in 1943 to meet with Churchill in Casablanca Morocco. The secret and circuitous journey began on January 11, with the plane stopping several times over four days to refuel and for its passengers to rest. Roosevelt and his entourage left Florida, touched down in the Caribbean, continued down the southern coast of South America to Brazil and then flew across the Atlantic to Gambia. They reached Casablanca on January 14. After a successful meeting with Churchill, as well as some sightseeing and visits to the troops, Roosevelt retraced the route back to the United States, celebrating his 61st birthday somewhere over Haiti.

Snapolit1 06-18-2025 04:56 PM

Very interesting. To any aviation buffs out there, I found this recent article very interesting. Hopefully not behind a paywall.

https://www.newyorker.com/newsletter...t-relationship





Quote:

Originally Posted by Chuck9788 (Post 2522543)
Charles Lindbergh did not make the first transatlantic flight on the “Spirit of St Louis” in 1927. His made the first “solo” flight.The first flight across the Atlantic was flown by John Alcock and Arthur Brown in 1919 from New Foundland Canada to Dublin Ireland. The plane crashed in a bog 20 miles off course.

The first US President to fly was Franklin Roosevelt in 1943 to meet with Churchill in Casablanca Morocco. The secret and circuitous journey began on January 11, with the plane stopping several times over four days to refuel and for its passengers to rest. Roosevelt and his entourage left Florida, touched down in the Caribbean, continued down the southern coast of South America to Brazil and then flew across the Atlantic to Gambia. They reached Casablanca on January 14. After a successful meeting with Churchill, as well as some sightseeing and visits to the troops, Roosevelt retraced the route back to the United States, celebrating his 61st birthday somewhere over Haiti.


John1941 06-18-2025 05:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snapolit1 (Post 2522624)
Very interesting. To any aviation buffs out there, I found this recent article very interesting. Hopefully not behind a paywall.

https://www.newyorker.com/newsletter...t-relationship

The newsletter and article are behind a paywall but you can read the newsletter at https://archive.is/RfeSA and the full article at https://archive.is/EsFIK


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