First aerial circumnavigation

(Redirected from Leslie P. Arnold)

The first aerial circumnavigation of the world was completed in 1924 by four aviators from an eight-man team of the United States Army Air Service, the precursor of the United States Air Force. The 175-day journey from April to September covered over 26,345 miles (42,398 km).[1] The team generally traveled east to west, around the northern-Pacific Rim, through to South Asia and Europe and back to Seattle's Sand Point Airfield in the United States. Airmen Lowell H. Smith and Leslie P. Arnold, and Erik H. Nelson and John Harding Jr. made the trip in two single-engined open-cockpit Douglas World Cruisers (DWC) configured as floatplanes for most of the journey. Lead aircraft Chicago, and the New Orleans completed the expedition. Four more flyers in two additional DWC began the journey but their aircraft crashed or were forced down. All airmen survived. They were awarded the Distinguished Service Medal, and the Mackay Trophy aviation award for 1924.

Photograph of three Douglas World Cruiser aircraft on a beach, Alaska, 1924. The "New Orleans" is in the foreground.
Photograph of three Douglas World Cruiser aircraft on a beach, Alaska, 1924. The "New Orleans" is in the foreground.

U.S. preparation for circumnavigation attempt

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In the early 1920s several countries were vying to be the first to fly around the world. The British had made one unsuccessful around-the-world air flight attempt in 1922. The following year, a French team had tried; the Italians, Portuguese, and British also announced plans for a world-circling flight.[2] In the spring of 1923, the U.S. Army Air Service became interested in having a squadron of military aircraft undertake a round-the-world flight. It assigned a group of officers in the War Department planning group, formed as the World Flight Committee,[3]: 6  the job of finding a suitable aircraft and planning the mission.[4] This high-level Army enterprise, under the ultimate command of Major General Mason M. Patrick, Chief of the Air Service, would ultimately have the additional support of the Navy, Diplomatic Corps, Bureau of Fisheries and Coast Guard Services.[3]: 4 

 
The aircraft shown here, Chicago, led the first round the world flight in 1924.

The War Department instructed the Air Service to look at both the Fokker T-2 transport and the Davis-Douglas Cloudster to see if either would be suitable and to acquire examples for testing.[N 1] Although deemed satisfactory, the planning group considered other U.S. Air Service military aircraft both in service and production, with a view that a dedicated design that could be fitted with interchangeable landing gear, wheeled and pontoons for water landings, would be preferable.[6]

When the head of Davis-Douglas, Donald Douglas, was asked for information on the Davis-Douglas Cloudster, he instead submitted data on a modified DT-2,[7] a torpedo bomber that Douglas had built for the U.S. Navy in 1921 and 1922. The DT-2 had proven to be a sturdy aircraft that could accommodate interchangeable wheeled and pontoon landing gear. Since the aircraft was an existing model, Douglas stated that a new aircraft, which he named the Douglas World Cruiser (DWC), could be delivered within 45 days after a contract was awarded. The Air Service agreed and sent Lieutenant Erik Henning Nelson (1888–1970), a member of the planning group, to California to work out the details with Douglas. [N 2][2]

Douglas, assisted by Jack Northrop,[9] began to modify a DT-2 to suit the circumnavigation requirements.[6] The main modification involved its fuel capacity.[10] All the internal bomb carrying structures were removed with additional fuel tanks added to the wings and fuselage fuel tanks enlarged in the aircraft. The total fuel capacity went from 115 gallons (435 liters) to 644 gallons (2,438 liters).[6]

Lt. Nelson took the Douglas proposal to Washington where General Patrick approved it on 1 August 1923. The War Department awarded an initial contract to Douglas for the construction of a single prototype.[11] The prototype met all expectations, and a contract was awarded for four more production aircraft and spare parts.[12] The last DWC was delivered on 11 March 1924. The spare parts included 15 extra Liberty engines, 14 extra sets of pontoons, and enough replacement airframe parts for two more aircraft.[11] These spare parts were sent ahead to locations along the route around the world the aircraft planned to follow.[13]

The aircraft were equipped with no radios[3]: 253 [14] nor avionics of any sort, leaving their crew to rely entirely on their dead reckoning skills to navigate throughout the venture.

Douglas World Cruiser aircraft and crew

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Pilots of the 1924 Round The World Flight
  • Seattle (No. 1): Maj. Frederick L. Martin (1882–1956), pilot and flight commander, and SSgt. Alva L. Harvey (1900–1992), flight mechanic (failed to circumnavigate)
  • Chicago (No. 2): Lt. Lowell H. Smith (1892–1945), pilot, subsequent flight commander, and 1st Lt. Leslie P. Arnold (1893–1961), co-pilot
  • Boston (No. 3)/Boston II (prototype): 1st Lt. Leigh P. Wade (1897–1991), pilot,[1] and SSgt. Henry H. Ogden (1900–1986), flight mechanic (failed to circumnavigate)
  • New Orleans (No. 4): Lt. Erik H. Nelson (1888–1970), pilot, and Lt. John Harding Jr. (1896–1968), co-pilot[7][3]: 43 

The pilots trained in meteorology and navigation at Langley Field in Virginia, where they also practiced in the prototype. From February to March 1924, the crews practiced on the production aircraft at the Douglas facility in Santa Monica and in San Diego.[3]: 10–12 

Team circumnavigation

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Four aircraft, Seattle, Chicago, Boston, and New Orleans, left Clover Field, Santa Monica, California, on 17 March 1924, for Sand Point in Seattle, Washington, the official start of the journey.[3]: 13 [15] The individual aircraft were formally christened with waters from their namesake cities, prior to departure from Seattle where Boeing Company technicians configured the aircraft for the long over-water portion of the flight, by exchanging wheels for pontoon floats.[16]

 
Major Martin and Sergeant Harvey at Port Moller after crash of the Seattle

On 6 April 1924,[17] just 13 days after the British, under Stuart-MacLaren, set off from England in the opposite direction,[18] they left Seattle for Alaska. Shortly after departing Prince Rupert Island on 15 April, the lead aircraft Seattle, flown by Martin with Harvey (the only fully qualified mechanic in the flight), blew a 3 inches (8 cm) hole in its crankcase and was forced to land on Portage Bay.[3]: 72  A replacement engine having been provided, the Seattle's crew resumed their journey on 25 April,[3]: 73  in an attempt to catch up with the other three aircraft awaiting in Dutch Harbor[3]: 78–79  but which ended in failure on 30 April when the Seattle crashed in dense fog into a mountainside near Port Moller on the Alaska Peninsula. It was destroyed in the crash. The crew survived six harrowing days in the elements before finding shelter in an unoccupied cabin on Moller Bay and made it to a cannery four days later.[3]: 86–91 [19]

The three remaining aircraft continued, with Chicago, flown by Smith and Arnold, assuming the lead. [N 3] Tracing the Aleutian Islands, the flight traveled across the North Pacific, landing in the Soviet Union notwithstanding the lack of entry permission.[6] The Aleuts of Atka applied the term "thunder-bird" from their mythology to the Cruisers.[3]: 100 

On 25 May, whilst in Tokyo, the team received a cable reporting "MacLaren crashed at Akyab [Burma]. Plane completely wrecked. Continuance of flight doubtful." They responded by arranging delivery of a spare plane from Tokyo to Akyab (Sittwe) on the USS Paul Jones (DD-230), transshipped in Hong Kong onto the USS William B. Preston, enabling the British to continue in their attempt to be first,[3]: 139–141  as the Portuguese and Argentinians also pressed on.[3]: 142 

 
Chicago flying with the floats configuration. At one point in crossing the Atlantic, the Chicago had to locate a navy ship and drop it a written note to rescue the crew of the Boston. There were no radios nor avionics.

The aircraft continued relatively uneventfully via Korea and down the coast of China to French Indochina (now Vietnam). After leaving Haiphong in the Gulf of Tonkin, the Chicago's engine broke a connecting rod and it was forced to land in a lagoon near Huế. The aircraft was considered a novelty in this region of the world and missionary priests supplied the pilots with food and wine while locals climbed aboard its pontoons. The other flyers, who had continued on to Tourane (Da Nang), searched for the Chicago by boat and found the crew sitting on the wing in the early morning hours. Three paddle-powered sampans with local crews towed the aircraft for 10 hours, and 25 miles (40 km), to Huế, where the engine was replaced with a spare urgently shipped up from Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City):[3]: 167–174  "[T]he fastest – and undoubtedly the first – engine change that had ever been made in Indochina."[20]

The flight continued through Thailand and on to Burma where they came within earshot of MacLaren during a torrential downpour east of Akyab, MacLaren having just resumed his attempt in the aircraft delivered by the Americans and sheltering on the surface at the time. Visual contact was not made and the Americans were unaware of their proximity to MacLaren.[3]: 190 

After carrying out the major operation of exchanging the Cruisers' floats for wheeled undercarriage at Calcutta, misfortune struck the Chicago crew on the evening of 29 June when Smith, in the dark after dinner, slipped and broke a rib. He nevertheless insisted on continuing without delaying the mission.[21][3]: 194  All three aircraft were fitted with new engines in Karachi, the New Orleans having suffered a catastrophic engine failure just short of that city and limped in on intermittent power.[3]: 207–209 

They then proceeded into the Middle East and then Europe.[8] The flight arrived in Paris on Bastille Day, 14 July. From Paris the aircraft flew to London and on to the north of England in order to prepare for the Atlantic Ocean crossing by re-installing pontoons and changing engines.[16][3]: 247 

 
U.S. President Calvin Coolidge inspected the planes when they landed in Washington, D.C., toward the end of the tour in September 1924

On 3 August 1924, en route from the Orkney Islands to Iceland, an oil pump failure forced the Boston down onto an uninviting sea less than halfway to the Faroes. The accompanying Chicago flew on to the Faroes where it dropped a note onto the supporting U.S. Navy light cruiser USS Richmond about the troubled aircraft.[20] The crew having been rescued unhurt, the Boston, then on tow, capsized and sank shortly before reaching the Faroes.[3]: 255–263  The Chicago and New Orleans had flown on to Hornafjörður, Iceland, the most northerly point of the circumnavigation (65 deg N).

After a long stay in Reykjavík, Iceland, where they fortuitously met Italian Antonio Locatelli and his crew, also in the course of the same circumnavigation attempt, and there accompanied by five navy vessels and their 2,500 seaman, the Chicago, with Smith and Arnold still in the lead, and the New Orleans, with Nelson and Harding, continued on for Fredricksdal, Greenland.[3]: 266  This was to be the longest leg of the entire journey, with those five vessels strung along the route.[3]: 272  New engines were installed on arrival at the second stop in Greenland, Ivigtut.[3]: 283 

On 31 August, they reached Labrador, Canada,[22][3]: 287  a fuel-pump failure in the Chicago having been overcome by four hours of hand pumping by Arnold.[3]: 28  After the original prototype, now named Boston II, arrived[11] in Pictou, Nova Scotia, the original Boston crew of Wade and Ogden were able to join the other two aircraft to fly on to Boston (where pontoon floats were exchanged for wheels again)[3]: 300  and Washington DC.[3]: 293 [23] After a hero's welcome in the capital, the three Douglas World Cruisers flew to the West Coast, on a celebratory multi-city tour, stopping, on 22 September, at Rockwell Field, San Diego, for new engines[3]: 311  and then arrived in Santa Monica to a welcoming crowd of at least 100,000 people.[3]: 312  Their final landing in Seattle was on 28 September 1924.[17]

The trip had taken 363 flying hours 7 minutes, over 175 calendar days, and covered 26,345 miles (42,398 km),[3]: 315 [2] succeeding where the British, Portuguese,[24] French, Italians and Argentinians failed. The Douglas Aircraft Company adopted the motto, "First Around the World – First the World Around".[N 4] The American team had greatly increased their chances of success by using several aircraft and pre-positioning large caches of fuel, spare parts, and other support equipment along the route. They often had several US Navy destroyers deployed in support.[3]: 149, 154  At prearranged way points, the World Flight's aircraft had their engines changed five times and new wings fitted twice.[8]

Itinerary

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Itinerary of the first aerial circumnavigation

The flight traveled from east to west, beginning in Seattle, Washington, in April 1924 and returning to its start point in September. It flew northwest to Alaska; across northern Pacific islands to Japan and then south Asia; across to Europe and the Atlantic Ocean. The route's most southerly point was Saigon in Vietnam[3]: 175  (10° N), while the northernmost stop was in Reykjavík, Iceland at 64°08' N. The refueling stops were:[3]: xxii 

Subsequent disposition of equipment and crew

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At the request of the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. War Department transferred ownership of the Chicago to the museum for display. It made its last flight from Dayton, Ohio, to Washington, D.C., on 25 September 1925. It was almost immediately put on display in the Smithsonian's Arts and Industries Building. In 1974, the Chicago was restored under the direction of Walter Roderick,[28] and transferred to the new National Air and Space Museum building for display in their Barron Hilton Pioneers of Flight exhibition gallery.[2]

Beginning in 1957, the New Orleans was displayed at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton.[29] The aircraft was on loan from the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History and was returned in 2005.[30] Since February 2012, the New Orleans is a part of the exhibits at the Museum of Flying in Santa Monica, California.[31]

The wreckage of the Seattle was recovered and is now on display in the Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum.[32] The original Boston sank in the North Atlantic, and it is thought that the only surviving piece of the original prototype, the Boston II, is the aircraft data plate, now in a private collection, and a scrap of fuselage skin, in the collection of the Vintage Wings & Wheels Museum in Poplar Grove, Illinois.[33]

All six airmen were awarded the Distinguished Service Medal by vote of the United States Congress, the first time such award had been made for acts not in the course of war, and they were excused from the prohibition against accepting awards from foreign countries.[3]: 325 

The best in flight Mackay Trophy for 1924 was awarded to Smith, Arnold, Wade, Nelson and Ogden.[34] Later, Martin was in command of Army aviation units in Hawaii at the time of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. His mechanic Harvey was commissioned and commanded heavy bomb groups during World War II. Nelson rose to the rank of colonel and became one of General Henry Arnold's chief trouble-shooters on the development and operational deployment of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress.

Cross-equator circumnavigation

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Charles Kingsford Smith
 
The Southern Cross at a RAAF base near Canberra in 1943.

The first aerial circumnavigation of the world that involved the crossing of the equator twice occurred from 1928 to 1930, and was made using a single aircraft, the Southern Cross, a Fokker F.VIIb/3m trimotor monoplane[35] crewed by Charles Kingsford Smith (lead pilot), Charles Ulm (relief pilot), James Warner (radio operator), and Harry Lyon (navigator and engineer).[35]

After completing the first trans-Pacific crossing on 9 June 1928, flying from Oakland, California to Brisbane, Australia (with stops in Hawaii and Fiji), Kingsford Smith and Ulm spent several months making other long-distance flights across Australia and to New Zealand. They decided to use their trans-Pacific flight as the first leg of a globe-circling flight.[36] They flew the Southern Cross to England in June 1929, then across the Atlantic and North America, returning, in 1930, to Oakland where their 1928 trans-Pacific flight had begun.[37]

Before Kingsford Smith's death in 1935, he donated the Southern Cross to the Commonwealth of Australia, for display in a museum.[38] The aircraft is preserved in a special glass 'hangar' memorial on Airport Drive, near the International Terminal at Brisbane Airport in Queensland, Australia.

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ During 1922–1923, the Fokker T-2 was used by the U.S. Army to set a series of long distance and endurance records.[5]
  2. ^ Lt. Nelson was eventually assigned to the World Flight as the pilot of DWC #4.[8]
  3. ^ One of the Army's best aviators, Smith was named to pilot the Chicago and was permitted to choose his own co-pilot, Arnold, who would double as a flight mechanic.[17]
  4. ^ The Douglas logo evolved into an aircraft, a missile, and a globe and was adopted by the McDonnell Douglas Corporation following the merger of Douglas and the McDonnell Aircraft Corporation in 1967, and then became the basis of the logo of the Boeing Company following its acquisition of McDonnell Douglas in 1997.[25][26][27]

Citations

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  1. ^ a b "Major General Leigh Wade". af.mil. Archived from the original on 13 August 2024. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d "Collections: Douglas World Cruiser Chicago – Long Description." National Air and Space Museum. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Thomas, Lowell (1925). The First World Flight. Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.
  4. ^ Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 548.
  5. ^ "Fine American Duration Flight." Flight, 19 October 1922, p. 615.
  6. ^ a b c d Rumerman, Judy. "The Douglas World Cruiser – Around the World in 175 Days." U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission, 2003. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  7. ^ a b "First to fly around the world." Did You Know.org. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  8. ^ a b c Mackworth-Praed 1990, p. 235.
  9. ^ Boyne 1982, p. 80.
  10. ^ Yenne 2003, p. 48.
  11. ^ a b c "Douglas DT-2 World Cruiser." Aviation Central.com. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  12. ^ Francillon 1979, p. 75.
  13. ^ Bryan 1979, p. 122.
  14. ^ communicating by message bag and hand signals
  15. ^ Stoff 2000, p. 21.
  16. ^ a b "Douglas World Cruiser Transport." Archived 25 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Boeing. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  17. ^ a b c "First round-the-world flight." National Museum of the United States Air Force, 8 July 2009. Retrieved: 14 July 2017.
  18. ^ "The Race to Fly First Around the World". Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  19. ^ "South Hangar: Douglas World Cruiser 'Seattle'." Archived 22 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  20. ^ a b Roberts, Chuck. "Magellans of the sky: lessons learned from the epic 1924 around the world flight are visible in today's Air Force, but the memory of those who made it possible have faded with the years. (A Centennial of Flight Special Feature)." Airman (subscription required), 1 July 2003. Retrieved: 20 July 2012.
  21. ^ Wendell 1999/2000, pp. 339–372, 356–366.
  22. ^ Haber 1995, pp. 72–73.
  23. ^ "Fliers At Seattle End World Flight of 27,000 Miles." The New York Times, 28 September 1924, p. 1. Retrieved: 29 July 2012.
  24. ^ d’Assumpção, H A (17 April 2018). "From Portugal to Macau". Club Lusitano. Archived from the original on 9 May 2019. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  25. ^ "Trademarks and Copyrights: Boeing logo", Boeing Trademark Management Group, Boeing, archived from the original on 21 June 2012, retrieved 5 July 2012
  26. ^ Boeing. "From Bow-Wing to Boeing". YouTube. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  27. ^ McDonnell Douglas Logo History, McDonnell Douglas, archived from the original on 5 June 1997, retrieved 29 November 2020
  28. ^ Boyne 1982, p. 18.
  29. ^ Ogden 1986, p. 168.
  30. ^ "Exhibits." Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. Retrieved: 5 July 2012.
  31. ^ "Exhibits & Features." Archived 11 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Museum of Flying, Santa Monica Airport, 2012. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  32. ^ "South Hangar: Douglas World Cruiser 'Seattle'." Archived 22 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum. Retrieved: 5 July 2012.
  33. ^ "Featured Artifact: Fabric from the Boston II Douglas World Cruiser." Archived 1 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Vintage Wings & Wheels Museum. Retrieved: 5 July 2012.
  34. ^ "Mackay 1920–1929 Recipients – NAA: National Aeronautic Association". naa.aero.
  35. ^ a b Sherman, Stephen. "Charles Kingsford Smith: First to Fly Across the Pacific." acepilots.com, 16 April 2012. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.
  36. ^ Cross 1972, p. 71.
  37. ^ Cross 1972, p. 74.
  38. ^ "RAAF Fokker F.VIIB Southern Cross VH-USU." Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine ADF Aircraft Serials. Retrieved: 7 July 2012.

Bibliography

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  • Swanborough, F. Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Military Aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam, 1963.
  • Wendell, David V. "Getting Its Wings: Chicago as the Cradle of Aviation in America." Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Volume 92, No. 4, Winter 1999/2000, pp. 339–372.
  • Will, Gavin. The Big Hop: The North Atlantic Air Race. Portugal Cove-St.Phillips, Newfoundland: Boulder Publications, 2008. ISBN 978-0-9730271-8-1.
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