![](https://stories.isu.pub/64967184/images/15_original_file_I0.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
4 minute read
The Seattle World Cruiser Prepares to Retrace the 1924 Flight
from NWAC2019 | FEB 23-24
by Imagination
The first circumnavigation of the globe by air was achieved in 1924 by a team of aviators from the U.S. Army Air Service. The trip lasted 175 days, covered approximately 27,000 miles, and included landings in 22 different countries.
![](https://stories.isu.pub/64967184/images/17_original_file_I1.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
AROUND THE WORLD THE FIRST FLIGHT BEGAN IN SEATTLE, WA
Reprinted from www.seattleworldcruiser.com | Visit them in booths # 603-604
In 1919, British aviators, John Alcock and Arthur Brown, first flew across the Atlantic.Later that same year, two Australians first flew from England to Australia. In 1923,two U.S. Army Air Service fliers made the first nonstop U.S. Transcontinental flight ina modified Fokker T-2. 1923 also saw several European flyers attempting to circumnavigatethe globe by air. All were unsuccessful in their efforts.
Undaunted by these failures, the U.S. Army Air Service was drawing up plans of their own to stake their claim as the first fliers to make the flight around the world. In a team effort that some historians have equated with the 1960s’ effort to put a man on the moon, Army planners in less than a year acquired suitable aircraft, researched an efficient but unorthodox route and devised a logistics network to support the flight. Working with the Douglas Airplane Company of Santa Monica, California, the Army purchased five highly modified Navy torpedo bombers capable of flying on wheels or pontoons -- a critical factor since they aircraft would switch between the two depending on which part of the world to be covered -- over land or along coastlines. One served as a prototype with the remaining four expected to make the journey, each with a pilot and mechanic. Douglas dubbed the aircraft the Douglas World Cruiser (DWC).
Unlike the other attempts which relied on prevailing winds to fly an easterly course, the Army chose the alternative, a westerly route.
![](https://stories.isu.pub/64967184/images/15_original_file_I1.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
pilots prepare for long flight
Weather experts concluded the most favorable weather for crossing the treacherous North Pacific occurred in the spring while the best chance to span the Atlantic appeared to be in late summer. To accommodate these considerations, Major General Mason Patrick, commander of the Air Service, declared the flight would start and end at Sand Point, a small military airfield a few miles northeast of downtown Seattle on the shore of Lake Washington.
![](https://stories.isu.pub/64967184/images/17_original_file_I2.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
Monkeys were a promotional stunt from a reception held at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles where the manager took eight stuffed monkeys down from the imitation palm trees in the lobby and presented them to the fliers asking rack to take a mascots. The only one that exists today is Maggie at the Smithsonian.
On April 6, 1924, the four DWCs -- the Seattle, Boston, Chicago and New Orleans -- departed Sand Point for southeast Alaska and points west. Despite horrible weather, the eight crewmembers pushed on. Unfortunately, the Seattle, piloted by the mission commander, Major Frederick. Martin, crashed into a mountain on the Alaska Peninsula. Surviving 10 days in the wilderness, Martin and Staff Sergeant Alva Harvey were rescued. Their flight was over; the three others continued on to Japan.
As the first aviators to cross the Pacific, the Army fliers received an incredible welcome from the Japanese. With little time to spare in their efforts to beat the monsoons in South Asia, they departed after replacing their engines and pontoons. With Martin left behind, Lt. Lowell Smith in the Chicago became mission commander.
While the tropical climate offered some relief from the chilly weather previously experienced, the aircraft proved less reliable than expected, prompting unscheduled delays for maintenance. Finally reaching Kolkata (Calcutta) on India’s East Coast, the aircraft underwent major changes -- the engines and wings were replaced and the pontoons swapped for wheels.
Relying on limited navigation aids and overcoming unfavorable weather and mechanical headaches, the crews battled their way westward across modern-day Pakistan, Iran, Iraq and into Turkey. From there they made their way across Europe, arriving in Paris on Bastille Day, July 14. Nearly back on schedule, they continued to London and then to Hull, where they transitioned back to pontoons before attempting the first successful east-to-west crossing of the Atlantic by airplane.
![](https://stories.isu.pub/64967184/images/17_original_file_I0.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
Between the Faeroe Islands and Iceland, engine failure prompted the Boston to land. A Navy destroyer positioned along the route for just such an eventuality rescued Lt. Leigh Wade and Sergeant Henry Ogden, then took Boston under tow, but the aircraft eventually sank.
On August 31, the two surviving aircraft reached Icy Tickle, Labrador. The world expressed a collective sigh of relief. The prototype aircraft, renamed Boston II, with Wade and Ogden at the controls, rejoined the surviving pair for their victory lap across North America. On September 28th, 1924 they touched down to a jubilant reception at Sand Point. They had come full circle to complete their long journey around the globe and into the history books.
The Seattle World Cruiser
The Seattle World Cruiser’s mission is to implement programs that promote aviation history and recognize Seattle’s rich aviation heritage through conducting public educational activities and projects.
The aim of the World Cruiser project is to fly a reproduction of one of the original 1924 Douglas Cruiser aircraft, dubbed Seattle II, around the world in celebration of that epic and historic first leap around our planet. The group has constructed a reproduction of one of the original aircraft to make the journey. Visit with founders, Bob & Diane Dempster at Conference in booths #603-604 or visit seattleworldcruiser.org.
![](https://stories.isu.pub/64967184/images/17_original_file_I3.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)