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NC-4

The NC-4 was the first aircraft to fly across the Atlantic Ocean. In May of 1919 the NC-4, a United States Navy flying boat made the crossing over 19 days with multiple stops along the way.

NC4nasagov.jpg
The NC-4

The mission was the result of planning that began during World War I, when Allied shipping was threatened by submarine warfare. Designs were started for an airplane capable of flying from the United States to Europe on its own power.

The planes were not finished and tested until after the war was over. The US Navy decided to try a demonstration of trans-Atlantic flight none the less.

The flight began on 8 May. The NC-4 was originally in the company of two other large flying boats, the NC-1 and the NC-3. The planes were made for the Navy by the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company. They left Long Island, New York, then stopped in Newfoundland before leaving on 16 May for the longest leg of their journey, the flight to the Azores, reached 15 hours later. The NC-1 and the NC-3 were both forced to land at sea due to rough weather; the crews were rescued by ships. After delays for repairs, the NC-4 took off again and landed in Lisbon, Portugal on 27 May, becoming the first airplane to cross the ocean under its own power, with 26 hours total flying time. The NC-4 later flew on to London, England.

The crew of the NC-4 was Albert C Read, commander/navigator; Walter Hinton and Elmer F Stone, pilots, James L Breese and Eugene S Rhoads, flight engineers, and Herbert C Rodd, radio operator.

NC4Crew.jpg
Crew of the NC-4, posing before the start of the flight
Left to right: Reed, Stone, Hinton, Rodd, E.H. Howard, Breese.
(Howard lost a hand in a propeller accident at the start of the mission, and was replaced by Rhoads.)

The NC-4 is now preserved in the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida.

External links

Referenced By

1919 | 27 May | 27th May | Alcock & Brown | Alcock and Brown | Atlantic Ocean | Curtiss | Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company | Flying boat | John Alcock and Arthur Brown | List of Flying Boats | List of flying boats and seaplanes | List of years in aviation | Marc A. Mitscher | Marc Mitscher | May 27 | May 27th | Milestones in Aviation | North Atlantic | North Atlantic Ocean | Timeline of aviation history | Transatlantic

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "NC-4".

 

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