April 2008
Airport Journals publish
China Clipper 75th Anniversary article
Click
here to read the April 08 Airport Journals article.
For immediate release: 24 January
2008
San Francisco Aeronautical
Society announces China Clipper 75th Anniversary Commemorative
Flight.
The San Francisco Aeronautical Society, in conjunction
with the Pan Am Historical Foundation, is pleased to announce a
major event commemorating what is generally regarded as the greatest
milestone in commercial aviation history. November 2010 will mark
the 75th anniversary of the famous China Clipper flight which opened
the Pacific to the world's first regular transoceanic commercial
air service. Today people cross oceans in airplanes without even
a second thought, but in 1935 that very first commercial trans-oceanic
flight was a mammoth undertaking that presaged modern international
travel.
The year is 1935. As Pan
American Airways plans its historic attempt to conquer the Pacific,
the world is in a deep economic depression. Franklin Roosevelt has
just been elected President of the United States – and will remain
so for an unprecedented 4 terms. There are only 48 states in the Union.
Alaska and Hawaii will not be added for almost 30 years. Prohibition
has been repealed and thanks to Hollywood, New York's Empire State
building will forever have King Kong associated with it.
The establishment of the trans-Pacific route
by Pan American Airways, a mere 32 years after the Wright Brothers'
Kitty Hawk success, overcame the greatest technological, geographical
and navigational challenges of the day. Their fleet of flying boats
captured the world's
imagination as they ushered in the age of global air travel.
The China Clipper 75th Anniversary
Flight will
retrace the Pacific Route that departed San Francisco to reach Hong
Kong via Honolulu, Midway, Wake, Guam, and Manila – albeit
with a modern aircraft. VIP functions will be held at each port of
call.
A web site, www.chinaclipper75.com,
has been created to provide information on the history of the Clippers
and the commemorative flight.
The San Francisco Aeronautical Society
is a not-for-profit volunteer organization dedicated to preserving
the history of aviation.