Dole Air Race
Date | August 1927 |
---|---|
Location | United States |
Type | Air racing |
Outcome | Two aircraft completed the race |
Casualties | |
10 deaths |
The Dole Air Race, also known as the Dole Derby, was an air race across the Pacific Ocean from Oakland, California, to Honolulu in the Territory of Hawaii held in August 1927 that resulted in several deaths.
There were eighteen official and unofficial entrants; of them fifteen officially drew for starting positions, and of those fifteen, two were disqualified, two withdrew, and three aircraft crashed resulting in three deaths before the race. Eight aircraft eventually started the race on August 16. Only two successfully arrived in Hawaii; Woolaroc, a Travel Air 5000 piloted by Arthur C. Goebel and William V. Davis, arrived after a 26 hour, 15 minute flight, leading runner-up Aloha by two hours.
Of the other six aircraft, two had crashed on takeoff, two were forced to return for repairs, and two went missing during the race (Golden Eagle and Miss Doran). One of the aircraft that was repaired took off again to search for the missing aircraft several days later but also vanished over the sea (Dallas Spirit). In all, before, during, and after the race, ten people died and six airplanes were lost or damaged beyond repair.
The Dole prize
[edit]Inspired by Charles A. Lindbergh's successful trans-Atlantic flight, James D. Dole, the Hawaii pineapple magnate, announced on May 25, 1927, a prize of $25,000 (equivalent to $353,000 in 2023[1]) for the first fixed-wing aircraft to fly the 3,870 kilometers (2,405 mi) from Oakland, California, to Honolulu, Hawaii, and $10,000 (equivalent to $141,000 in 2023[1]) for second place.[2][3] The flights would have to be completed before August 15, 1928. Dole stated he hoped that Lindbergh would compete.[4] The prospect of breaking more long-distance flight records enticed other wealthy businessmen to offer similar Pacific-conquering prizes: Sid Grauman offered $30,000 (equivalent to $424,000 in 2023[1]) to the first to fly from Los Angeles to Tokyo,[5] and William Easterwood offered a similar $25,000 prize for the first to fly from Dallas to Hong Kong in three stops (Honolulu, Guam or Manila, and San Francisco), taking no more than "144 consecutive hours" and before 28 September.[6] All the wealthy patrons hoped to draw Lindbergh.[7]
The Honolulu chapter of the National Aeronautic Association drew up rules for the Dole race.[8]
The transpacific record
[edit]The publicity for the first successful transpacific flights from Oakland to Hawaii was stolen by two flights in June and July 1927, ahead of the scheduled August start for the Dole Derby. On 28 June, about a month after Dole posted the prizes, US Army Air Corps Lieutenants Lester J. Maitland and Albert F. Hegenberger flew Bird of Paradise (a three-engine Atlantic-Fokker C-2 military aircraft) from Bay Farm Airport in Oakland to Wheeler Army Airfield on Oahu in 25 hours and 50 minutes.[9][10] An earlier attempt in 1925 had ended in failure for two Navy PN-9 seaplanes; one of the aircraft, commanded by Commander John Rodgers, ran out of fuel several hundred miles short of Hawaii and sailed to Kauai over the next nine days.[11]
Ernie Smith and Captain C.H. Carter had arrived in Oakland earlier to attempt to parallel the Maitland/Hegenberger flight in the City of Oakland, a small Travel Air 5000 civilian monoplane, but due to mechanical difficulties, took off two hours after Maitland, and returned with a broken windshield. Unlike Lindbergh's purpose-built Spirit of St. Louis, City of Oakland had been serving as a mail carrier for Pacific Air Transport.[12] According to Smith, Carter threatened to dump the gas after the windshield was lost, forcing the plane's return shortly after takeoff.[13] Carter quit after the record was lost, but Smith hired Emory Bronte as a navigator, and took off again on July 14.[14] Upon running out of fuel 26 hours and 36 minutes later, they crash-landed in a thorn tree on Molokai.[9][13][15]
Dole disqualified the successful June and July flights from his prizes because they had not followed his rules.[16]: 181 The Air Corps flight had been planned months prior to the prize announcement and had no intent to land other than at Wheeler airfield.
By July 22, the starting and ending points had not been set. San Francisco began developing its new municipal airport, Mills Field, in anticipation that it could entice pilots into choosing it as the origin; the initial planned destination was John Rodgers Airport near Honolulu.[17]
Contestants draw positions
[edit]The first official entrant, announced on June 28, was Arthur Cornelius Goebel .[18] Another early entrant was Dick Grace, who shipped his plane to San Francisco shortly after he crashed his Cruzair,[19] forcing him to abandon a Kauai to San Francisco attempt in June.[20][21][22] At the time, both Grace and Goebel were better known as founding members of the Thirteen Flying Black Cats, nicknamed the "Suicide Squadron", a Hollywood stunt pilot association started in 1922;[23] that group's exploits were dramatized in the 1932 film The Lost Squadron.[24] The two stuntmen were quickly joined by other contestants as the August 2 entry deadline approached.[25]
Fourteen official and four unofficial entrants were announced on August 3; Grace was not part of the group.[26] The draw for starting position in the Dole race was held on 8 August in the office of C. W. Saunders, California director of the National Aeronautics Association, at the Matson Building in San Francisco. Of the eighteen entries, fifteen made the official draw;[27] contestants could choose to take off from Mills Field near San Francisco or Oakland Municipal Airport,[28] but the contestants later decided the air currents at Mills were too dangerous and all aircraft would take off from Oakland instead.[29] Bennett Griffin received the first draw.[30]
Entrant | Starting Position | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aircraft name | Pilot | Navigator | From | Notes(Aircraft type) | Drawn | Mills / Oakland |
Woolaroc | Arthur C. Goebel | Santa Monica, CA | Travel Air 5000 NX869 | 9 | M (1) | |
Pabco Flyer | Maj. Livingston Irving | Berkeley, CA | Breese-Wilde Model 5 | 7 | O (7) | |
Miss Doran | John Augie Pedlar (w/ Miss Mildred Doran) |
Manley R. Lawing | Flint, MI | Buhl Airsedan NX2915 | 4 | O (4) |
Wanda | Frederick A. Giles | Detroit, MI | Hess Blue Bird NX1445 | 6 | O (6) | |
City of Peoria | Charles W. Parkhurst | Lomax, IL | Air King Biplane NX3070 | 3 | O (3) | |
El Encanto | Lt. N. A. Goddard | Lt. K. C. Hawkins | San Diego, CA | Goddard Special, NX5074 | 2 | O (2) |
Angel of Los Angeles | Arthur Vickers Rogers | Leland A. Bryant | Los Angeles, CA | Bryant Monoplane X705 | 14 | O (11) |
Golden Eagle | John W. Frost | Gordon Scott | San Francisco, CA | Lockheed Vega NX913 | 15 | M (2) |
Oklahoma | Bennett Griffin | Al Henley | Bartlesville, OK | Travel Air 5000 NX811 | 1 | O (1) |
unnamed | Robert C. Fowler | San Francisco, CA | 10 | — | ||
Pride of Los Angeles | Capt. J. L. Giffin | Theodore Lundgren | Long Beach, CA | International CF-10 Triplane, | 8 | O (8) |
Dallas Spirit | Capt. & Mrs. Wm. P. Erwin | Dallas, TX | 5 | O (5) | ||
Miss Hollydale | Frank L. Clarke | Hollywood, CA | International F-18 Air-Coach 912 or NX912 | 12 | M (10) | |
Spirit of John Rodgers | George D. Covell | San Diego, CA | Pacific Aircraft Company J-30
(Tremaine Humming Bird) |
13 | — | |
Aloha | Martin Jensen | Honolulu, HI | Breese-Wilde Model 5 | 11 | — | |
Unknown | Robert Horseley | Sarasota, FL | unofficial | — | — | |
Unknown | Maj. C. Usborne | Vancouver, BC | unofficial | — | — | |
Unknown | Claire Vance | San Francisco, CA | unofficial | — | — |
Contestants were to present the aircraft and pilots by Monday, August 8 in San Francisco, so the Bay Area chapter of the National Aeronautic Association could check their certificates and licenses as a final qualification. Once their papers were checked, the contestants would again draw for starting positions.[31]
Race preparations
[edit]Trouble and confidence before the race
[edit]Before the race started, many of the aircraft had mechanical issues during test flights and while traveling to San Francisco to meet the final qualification deadline. Pabco Flyer (Irving) broke a fuel line while conducting a test flight on August 5 from San Francisco to San Diego,[32] and was forced down in a cow pasture near Point Sur, approximately 40 miles (64 km) south of Monterey.[16]: 181 [33] Golden Eagle (Frost/Scott) hit a gopher hole on the runway while taking off from San Diego and wrecked the landing gear and propeller.[16]: 182 City of Peoria (Parkhurst/Lowes) was delayed by sandflies, and Bluebird (Giles) was stuck at Detroit with engine issues.[16]: 182 [34]
Oklahoma (Griffin/Henley) took off on August 4 for an intended nonstop flight from Bartlesville to San Francisco,[35] but was forced down near Amboy by a broken exhaust pipe;[16]: 181 after effecting repairs, Oklahoma took off again at approximately 7 am on August 5, but the aircraft came down again 7 miles (11 km) outside of Los Angeles due to heavy fog.[33]
Spirit of John Rodgers (Covell/Waggener) was also forced down twice during a flight from Brea to San Diego: first near Santa Ana by fog during a test flight on August 5;[16]: 181–182 [33] then again after an oil feed line broke on August 6, forcing the plane down at Escondido. The Tremaine Humming Bird monoplane, which was designed and built by William D. Tremaine, had a wingspan of 47 feet 6 inches (14.48 m) and a low wing configuration, unusual for the time.[36]
Meanwhile, Mildred Doran, Auggy Pedlar, and navigator Manley Lawing were flying into Oakland on August 6 when their aircraft developed engine trouble due to fouled spark plugs. They successfully landed near Mendota in a wheat field in the San Joaquin Valley, but damaged the landing gear in the process and had trouble making repairs because they no longer had any tools. Doran went to Modesto, California to secure tools and a mechanic;[37] she quipped "We threw [the tools] off at Long Beach because they were in the way and cluttering things up."[9][16]: 182 Lawing, chief aerographer and meteorologist at Naval Air Station North Island,[32] was later replaced by Vilas R. Knope when Lawing could not satisfy the race committee of his navigational skills.[38] He reportedly got lost over Oakland.
James L. Giffin announced he needed US$15,000 to complete a giant triplane under construction in July 1927; at the time, he was planning to fly it from Los Angeles to Tokyo via Hawaii.[39] The motors of the triplane, by then named Pride of Los Angeles, were installed in early August.[32] After a short test flight on August 10, Giffin confidently predicted they would rest upon arrival in Honolulu, then continue to Australia nonstop, a distance of 4,100 miles (6,600 km). Giffin's intended final destination was Paris, a flight of 30 days in total via Borneo, India, Constantinople, and Rome.[40]
Frank Clarke's biplane Miss Hollydale completed a roundtrip test flight from Los Angeles to San Diego without incident on August 4.[32] Captain and Mrs. Erwin announced they would be departing Dallas in the Dallas Spirit for Oakland on August 6 or 7, planning to continue around the world via Tokyo after the race to Hawaii.[32]
Goddard had already built and tested El Encanto and anticipated it would reach speeds of 120 mph (190 km/h) at takeoff, speeding up to 140 mph (230 km/h) when nearing Honolulu as fuel was consumed, lightening the aircraft. El Encanto means "The Enchanted" and was designed by Goddard after the streamlining of a salmon.[41]
Woolaroc, piloted by Goebel, was originally intended to fly solo,[32] but later decided to have Lieutenant W. J. Slattery navigate;[34] for the flight to Hawaii, Lt. William V. Davis navigated for Woolaroc. Goebel departed from Bartlesville on a nonstop flight to San Francisco on August 6.[42] In test flights before the race, Goebel's Woolaroc encountered gear issues that required Goebel to hang outside the plane to fix.
Martin Jensen and Robert Fowler competed over the purchase rights for the same Breese-Wilde Model 5; Jensen won that race after his wife Margaret raised US$15,000 from local backers in Honolulu, and Jensen took delivery of Aloha on August 8.[16]: 178 Fowler, left without an airplane for the contest, was forced to withdraw.[16]: 183, 185 Because Aloha was only completed when the race was nearly about to begin, the preparations for the contest were rushed; the fuel tanks on Aloha only held 130 US gallons (490 L) and the original plan was to add sufficient spare fuel capacity via forty-nine portable 5 US gal (19 L) containers,[34][43] requiring the navigator to fill the central tank, then transfer fuel to the 50 US gal (190 L) tank in use via a hand pump; the plane was later retrofitted with a 405 US gal (1,530 L) tank, obviating the need for the complicated refueling plan, which would have required the passing of written messages between the two men.[44]: 84
Three days: three crashes, three dead
[edit]Two days after they drew the thirteenth position, on August 10 United States Navy Lieutenants George W. D. Covell and R. S. Waggener took off from San Diego, California in their Tremaine Humming Bird named Spirit of John Rodgers to fly to Oakland; after flying into a fog bank, the aircraft crashed into an ocean cliff at Point Loma, killing both men.[45][46] Lt. Leo Pawlikowski was the navigator originally announced;[32] Pawlikowski had developed an abscess on his back which required surgery, and the doctors would not allow him to participate, so he was replaced with Waggener.[16]: 179–180 William Davis, a Navy lieutenant who would serve as the navigator for Art Goebel on Woolaroc, was granted leave to participate in the race; he had planned to catch a ride with Covell and Waggener to San Francisco, but the leave was not granted in time, and he took a train from San Diego instead.[44]: 83
Then, on 11 August, as J. L. Giffin and Theodore S. Lundgren approached Oakland, their aircraft, a converted Catron & Fisk CF-10 triplane airline named the Pride of Los Angeles sponsored by the film actor Hoot Gibson and five businessmen, crashed into San Francisco Bay, but the two men and their passenger, Laurence Willes, were able to escape and swim to shore.[47][48]
The next day, British ace Arthur V. Rogers took off for a test flight on August 12 in the twin-engine Angel of Los Angeles at Western Air Express Field at Montebello, California, the aircraft reached an altitude of 200 feet (61 m) and began acting "queer";[49] Rogers jumped out of the plane as it suddenly dived towards the ground, but died as either his foot or parachute snagged on the aircraft as it crashed.[50][51][52] Leland A. Bryant, the designer of the aircraft, was to have served as Rogers's navigator, but was not on board during the test flight.[53]
Withdrawals and disqualifications
[edit]Maj. Livingston Irving was the first pilot to qualify for the contest.[37] During the pre-race inspections, Major Clarence Young declared that up to ten of the fifteen entries may be disqualified for inadequate fuel capacity; the rule stated that a single-engine aircraft was required to carry 460 US gallons (1,700 L) of fuel, a nominal capacity of 400 US gallons (1,500 L) plus a 15% reserve.[54] Another rule was interpreted to require pilots to hold a license from the Department of Commerce, which five pilots (not named) did not have.[43]
Arose a horde of pompous men to boss the job, as you may ken; made sets of rules to puzzle, fool, as though the racers saw no school; they plotted charts, allotted starts, ruled on gas tanks, criticized parts, befuzzled everything worse 'n tarts till they wracked people's nerves, upset hearts — pray tell me why.
— Frank L. Phillips, race team sponsor, "Pray Tell Me Why?", Healdsburg Tribune (August 12, 1927)[55]
The race, originally scheduled to start on August 12, was postponed on August 11, in light of the numerous mechanical issues, failed qualification tests, and poor weather.[16]: 184 The Aeronautics Division of the Commerce Department (the forerunner to today's Federal Aviation Administration) felt the planned race was unsafe and supported a two-week delay; other changes urged by the Aeronautics Division included switching the route to fly an equivalent distance over land (for instance, a nonstop flight across the continental United States) or changing the direction to fly from Hawaii to California, as the consequences of a navigation error would be less dire.[56] Several contestants protested the delay, and the Honolulu chapter of the National Aeronautic Association refused to endorse the recommendation of the Oakland chapter to postpone, meaning the race would proceed.[57] However, nine of the contestants agreed to postpone the contest late in the evening of August 11, which would give the teams time to rest and pass the stringent qualification tests; the deadline to qualify was extended to 10 AM on August 15.[34]
A three-part qualification test was administered to the navigators by Naval Lieutenant Ben H. Wyatt, consisting of a written, oral, and flying examination. For the flight exam, the pilot and navigator were sent over a predetermined course and upon their return, quizzed to determine which points they had passed. By August 11, none of the crews had passed the test. Pedlar's Miss Doran was found to have inaccurate compasses.[58] Later, it was noted that only two teams had qualified (El Encanto and Golden Eagle), with one more likely to qualify (Oklahoma) by the original date of Friday, August 12.[34] On August 12, four crews had passed: Oklahoma (Griffin/Henley), El Encanto (Goddard/Hawkins), Pabco Pacific Flyer (Irving), and Golden Eagle (Frost/Scott).[59] Miss Doran (Pedlar/Knope) passed with a new navigator on August 13.[60] By the qualification deadline of August 15, nine crews had passed the tests;[61] Dallas Spirit was the final qualifier.[62]
On August 10, Hollywood pilot and actor Frank Clarke either withdrew or was disqualified from participating in the race with his navigator, Jeff Warren, in Miss Hollydale, an International F-17 biplane.[63][64] Clarke announced he would attempt the world endurance record instead and took off abruptly on August 13 with his sponsor, Charley H. Babb, leaving the other contestants fuming.[65] One day later, Clarke sent a telegram to the race sponsors from Los Angeles, apologizing for the furor and officially withdrawing from the race.[66]
On August 15, Frederick Giles was disqualified as he had not arrived in time to meet the navigation qualification test deadline.[61] Giles would go on to attempt a solo flight from San Francisco to Honolulu in November as the first leg of a planned flight to Australia.[67] A missing component on a spare compass for Miss Doran sparked fears of vandalism the night before the flight,[68] and competitors vowed to protect their aircraft with shotguns overnight. Pedlar later stated the missing magnet was probably an oversight by the maintenance crew.[69]
The Air King (formerly City of Peoria), flown by Charles Parkhurst and Ralph C. Lowes Jr., was disqualified at 11:15 AM on the 16th, less than an hour before the first plane would start, because its 370-US-gallon (1,400 L; 310 imp gal) tanks were estimated to give the plane a range 300 miles (480 km) short by inspectors.[70] A test was held at sundown on August 15 to quantify fuel consumption; it was determined the aircraft would consume 13 US gallons per hour (0.82 L/min) when cruising at 90 mph (140 km/h).[69]
The Dole Derby
[edit]Final participants
[edit]The race began on 16 August, by which time the starting line-up had dwindled to nine aircraft, with one of the nine disqualified just before the start of the race. In order of start, they were:[61][71]
- Oklahoma, one of two modified Travel Air 5000 aircraft, NX911, piloted by Bennett Griffin and navigated by Al Henley[72]
- El Encanto, a Goddard Special metal monoplane, NX5074, flown by Norman A. Goddard and Kenneth C. Hawkins, which was heavily favored in the pre-race odds
- Pabco Pacific Flyer, a Breese-Wilde Monoplane, NX646, flown alone by Livingston Gilson Irving
- Golden Eagle, the prototype Lockheed Vega 1 monoplane, NX913, flown by Jack Frost and navigated by Gordon Scott
- Miss Doran, a Buhl CA-5 Air Sedan, NX2915, flown by Auggy Pedlar, navigated by Vilas R. Knope, and carrying Mildred Doran
- DQ City of Peoria, an Air King biplane, NX3070, flown by Charles Parkhurst and navigated by Ralph Lowes, disqualified the day of the hop-off for inadequate fuel capacity[69]
- Aloha, a Breese-Wilde 5 Monoplane, NX914, flown by Martin Jensen and navigated by Paul Schluter
- Woolaroc, a Travel Air 5000 sister ship of Oklahoma, NX869, flown by Arthur C. Goebel and navigated by William V. Davis[72]
- Dallas Spirit, a Swallow Monoplane, NX941, flown by William Portwood Erwin and navigated by Alvin Hanford Eichwaldt[73]
Oakland start
[edit]The fifteen competitors were seen off by a crowd estimated to include 75,000 to 100,000 persons on August 16, 1927. Weather was predicted to have a high fog on takeoff (extending from approximately 50 to 100 miles (80 to 161 km) offshore) and intermittent, localized showers along the route.[74] A fog bank started at the Golden Gate and the entire route was overcast.[75] At Oakland Municipal Airport, clearance to depart was not granted until just before noon; the fog that had lain over the airport did not lift until 10:40 AM.[16]: 187
The initial takeoffs were plagued with trouble, as several of the heavily-laden aircraft struggled to take off. Oklahoma took off first, just after 12 PM.[16]: 187 [76] The crew would eventually abort the flight over San Francisco with an overheating engine.[72] She was followed by El Encanto at 12:02 PM,[76] which failed to clear the runway before she swerved and crashed, smashing the port wing 4,800 feet (1,500 m) from the starting line.[16]: 187 Pabco Flyer, starting at 12:09 PM,[76] lifted momentarily into the air, then crashed some 7,000 feet (2,100 m) from the start.[16]: 187 Their crews were not hurt.
The last five planes successfully departed. Golden Eagle took off smoothly at 12:30 PM and flew out of sight.[76] Miss Doran succeeded in taking off at 12:31 PM.[76] The final three, Aloha (at 12:33 PM), Woolaroc (12:34 PM), and Dallas Spirit (12:36 PM) all left uneventfully.[76]
Oklahoma passed through the Golden Gate at 12:20 PM, followed by Aloha at 12:48.[70] Aircraft then began to return: Miss Doran circled back and landed approximately ten minutes after departing (12:43 PM),[76][77]: 252 its engine "sputtering like a Tin Lizzie."[16]: 187 [78] Oklahoma returned to Oakland and Dallas Spirit also turned back, both returning at approximately 1:08 PM;[70] Oklahoma had ripped the fabric covering the fuselage, and Dallas Spirit was having issues with its tail gear.[16]: 188 [79]
Ship | Distance | From |
---|---|---|
SS Wilhelmina | 1,400 mi 2,300 km |
Honolulu |
SS City of Los Angeles | 800 mi 1,300 km |
Los Angeles |
SS Manukai | 950 mi 1,530 km |
San Francisco |
SS President Harrison | 800 mi 1,300 km |
San Francisco |
SS Manulani | 1,160 mi 1,870 km |
Maui |
SS Inora | 800 mi 1,300 km |
Honolulu |
SS Manoa | 1,820 mi 2,930 km |
San Francisco |
Miss Doran and Pabco Flyer would make second starting attempts; Pabco Flyer crashed a second time at 1 PM,[76] putting her out of the race for good, but Miss Doran succeeded and took off again at 2:03 PM.[16]: 188 [76][77]: 252 Of the fifteen teams that participated in the draw, just four were on the course: Golden Eagle, Aloha, Woolaroc, and Miss Doran.
A series of ships were strung out along the route from San Francisco to Honolulu to transmit radio signals (allowing radio-equipped airplanes to take bearings), mark distances, and provide emergency aid if needed.[74] In addition, the Navy's sole aircraft carrier, USS Langley, was put on standby in San Diego.[44]: 78
Woolaroc and Aloha finish
[edit]Woolaroc flew a great-circle route, flying at an altitude of 4,000 to 6,000 feet (1,200 to 1,800 m), above the cloud cover. The navigator, Davis, used sextants and smoke bombs to calculate course and wind drift; although the radio beams from the picket ships stationed along the route helped guide the aircraft, Davis used it only to check the course plotted via traditional instruments. Of the four aircraft headed to Hawaii, only Woolaroc had a two-way radio capable of sending and receiving messages. In fact, Davis had packed a spare radio and repair parts based on Bronte's prior experience in July.[44]: 81 The crew radioed Wahiawa Radio Station, next to Wheeler Field, when they were approximately 200 miles (320 km) out with an estimated remaining time of 21⁄2 hours.[44]: 82 They were greeted in Hawaii by a crowd estimated between 25,000 and 30,000, and escorted by a Boeing PW-9 out of Wheeler Field. Goebel and Davis won the race in 26 hours, 17 minutes, earning them the US$25,000 first prize.[44]: 82 After their sponsors were paid, Goebel and Davis split the remainder, earning them each US$7,500.[80]
Marguerite Jensen, the wife of Martin, anxiously asked the crew of Woolaroc if they had sighted Aloha, which had departed just ahead of Woolaroc; they replied they had not, adding to her anxiety.[44]: 82 Jensen flew much of the way at a low altitude of 10 to 50 feet (3.0 to 15.2 m) above sea level, helping fuel economy but making it impossible to sight the stars for navigation.[44]: 84 Three times during the flight, Jensen attempted to climb to 4,000 feet (1,200 m), but went into a tailspin each time; once Jensen inadvertently commanded a shallow dive and skimmed the water with the landing gear, prompting him to rise to a safer altitude of 500 feet (150 m).[44]: 86–87
The next morning, at 9:30 AM (Hawaii time) on August 17, Jensen calculated they should be close to Hawaii, based on average speed and time elapsed.[81] Over the next two and a half hours Schluter, the navigator, attempted to determine their position from the sun.[44]: 87 At noon on August 17, Schluter was able to plot their location: they were approximately 200 miles (320 km) north of Oahu, and Jensen turned for the finish. When they landed at approximately 2:15 PM, Aloha had only 5 US gallons (19 L) of fuel remaining; in order to ensure the engine never starved for fuel, the crew was required to pump the gravity-fed tank until it overflowed.[44]: 87 [81]
Aloha arrived approximately two hours after Woolaroc, in 28 hours, 16 minutes, earning Jensen and Schluter the US$10,000 second prize. Out of his $10,000 winnings, pilot Jensen gave his navigator Schluter only $25.[82] Details of Schluter's scanty share became public after he approached friends in Hawaii to help him cash a check; Jensen stated that Schluter had taken the position for experience[80] and the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Schluter had offered to pay any Dole pilot $500 to permit him to navigate.[83] Wyatt singled out the crew of Aloha for praise, calling their use of dead reckoning the greatest single achievement in the history of aviation, especially in comparison to the radio-following course of Woolaroc, which he called "as easy as walking down a railroad track."[84]
After the race
[edit]Search for Golden Eagle and Miss Doran
[edit]Neither Golden Eagle nor Miss Doran was ever seen again.[16]: 188 [85] Dole put up a US$10,000 reward for anyone who found either plane; this was matched by each plane's sponsors, for a total of US$20,000 reward for each aircraft.[44]: 87 [86] Of the two, Golden Eagle had a radio capable of reception only and could use the shipboard radio signals for navigation;[44]: 81 Miss Doran had no radio equipment at all.[77]: 254 The odds of survival were grim; although each plane was required to carry fresh water, food, and a life raft, these were limited in quantity and durability as seaborne assistance had been anticipated to respond quickly.[86][87] In addition, the route was experiencing rough seas and a high sea state.[88] Unlike the unsuccessful flight of Rodgers in 1925, the two missing aircraft were not flying boats, and they were not expected to remain afloat for more than a few days.[89] Both Jensen and Goebel took to the air and searched the ocean on August 18; Goebel searched near Kauai and Jensen checked the Molokai Channel.[90]
According to Wyatt, the radial engine of Miss Doran was misfiring on four of nine cylinders when it returned to Oakland; he believed the aircraft had gone down shortly after entering the fog bank just off the Golden Gate.[91] Miss Doran was last sighted passing the Farallon Islands at 2:43 PM Pacific Standard Time (PST).[77]: 252
Golden Eagle was last reported approximately halfway to Honolulu, at the southern edge of the course with Aloha at 2 AM PST on August 17 by SS City of Los Angeles, relaying messages from the Army Signal Corps.[77]: 254 At about the same time, SS Manulani relayed a message that Woolaroc, possibly accompanied by Miss Doran, was also approximately halfway, at the northern edge of the course.[77]: 254 Because Golden Eagle had sufficient fuel to reach and pass Hawaii altogether, some theorized the aircraft may have overshot the goal in the darkness;[92] Wyatt rejected that theory as ludicrous, as the Golden Eagle would have passed over the islands in broad daylight.[84]
42 Navy ships were involved in the search for the Golden Eagle and Miss Doran, joined by smaller vessels based in Hawaii; USS Langley and Aroostook departed from San Diego the night of August 17.[93] The search fleet included three submarines, USS R-8, S-42, and S-46. By August 19, Langley had started steaming towards Hawaii at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) from a spot 40 miles (64 km) west of the Farallones, sweeping a lane 200 miles (320 km) wide with its airplanes. Other surface ships that had set out from California were commanded to shift their search parallel to the Great Circle route.[86] Meanwhile, three ships left Hawaii for San Francisco on August 18, sweeping the ocean in the opposite direction: USS S-29, Pelican, and Sunnadin.[94][95]
Some residents of Wailuku stated they had heard an airplane's engine grow louder, then abruptly cease on the afternoon of the 17th.[96] Two boys said they had seen an aircraft run out of fuel and glide down just 1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) off the north shore of Oahu on August 17 at 9 PM local time, with its engine glowing red.[97] A report that Miss Doran had been found in Honolua Bay the night of August 18 proved to be false; a sampan with an identical red, white, and blue color scheme had been mistaken for the aircraft.[98][99] On August 19, an amateur radio operator in Alhambra reportedly intercepted a radio message stating a derelict airplane had been found along with a raft containing a live man and a dead woman;[100][101] the radio frequency was not traditionally used by ships, however, and no ships were known to be in the vicinity of the transmission's origin.[102]
Final flight of Dallas Spirit
[edit]5:10 PM — Passed S. S. Manoa, dipped in salute, answered on whistle, which we couldn't hear, only seeing steam; might pick up destroyer squadrons, although this depends on their speed.
5:45 PM — Saw a rum-runner on left; had a hell of a time keeping Ike in the plane.
5:52 PM — Passed a destroyer bound for Honolulu.
7:10 PM — Changed course; now at lat. 35:30 N., lon. 130 W.
7:18 PM — Weather partly cloudy, sea smooth, visibility 30 miles.
8:03 PM — Getting dark.
9:02 PM — SOS – Went into tail spin; came out O. K. but sure scared; sure was a close call; Bill Erwin thought it was all off but we came out of it, the lights on the instrument board went out and it was so dark that Bill couldn't see the tail spin.
9:10 PM — SOS tail spin–
— radio transmissions from crew of Dallas Spirit, transcribed by Associated Press, published August 20, 1927[103][104][105]
After repairing Dallas Spirit, Erwin and Eichwaldt joined the search, leaving Oakland for Honolulu on August 19 at approximately 2:20 PM PST;[16]: 189–190 [75][98] the crew intended for Honolulu to be the next stop on their way to Hong Kong to win the Easterwood prize,[7] although Erwin stated they would refuel in Hawaii and fly back to Oakland if they did not spot the missing aircraft on the westbound trip.[106] Local ham radio operators convinced Erwin to take along the radio set from Pabco Pacific Flyer, a 50-watt transmitter powerful enough to allow the aircraft to stay in contact with other operators in California or Hawaii for the entire trip.[107][108]: 144
Their last radio message, received at 9 PM that night, was that they were in a tailspin approximately 600 miles (970 km) out to sea.[109][110] Dallas Spirit was also never seen again. Erwin's aircraft was reported to be 600 miles (970 km) from Hawaii at noon on August 20, but the report was not confirmed.[111] USS Hazelwood, which was approximately 100 miles (160 km) away and searching for the other two missing aircraft when Dallas Spirit went down, proceeded to the spot where the last transmission was made, arriving less than three hours later. Hazelwood scoured a area of 3,200 square miles (8,300 km2) without finding any wreckage or flotsam from Dallas Spirit.[112][113][114]
By August 22, naval ships from California had met their counterparts who had left from Hawaii, with neither fleet finding a trace of the three planes.[115] On August 23, green flares were spotted on the slope of Mauna Kea, but Army airplanes sent to investigate reported the flares were a new gasoline-powered light being tested by a rancher.[116]
At the time, the Navy's search operation was authorized to continue until August 23,[117] then extended to August 25,[118] after 16 ships were added to the search fleet, including USS Omaha.[119] Ships were ordered to "Seek Till All Hope Gone" on the night of August 24.[120] The estimated cost of the extra fuel used in the search was US$90,000,[121] later revised to $135,000, with 8,000 sailors involved.[96] A final accounting tallied the total cost at US$82,246.14 (equivalent to $1,440,000 in 2023), of which US$70,256.34 (equivalent to $1,230,000 in 2023) was for fuel; the search covered an area of 350,000 square miles (910,000 km2) and involved 54 ships, which steamed a combined total of 152,000 miles (245,000 km), and airplanes from Langley flew 9,000 miles (14,000 km) of search routes.[122]
On October 1, another tugboat was dispatched to the Johnston Atoll, approximately 750 miles (1,210 km) northwest of Hawaii, under the continued suspicion that Golden Eagle had overshot Hawaii or drifted past it after ditching in the ocean.[123][124] After a thorough search, USS Whippoorwill radioed that no trace of the missing aircraft had been found.[125]
Fragments and clues
[edit]Bright yellow debris with dangling wires was spotted several hundred miles off Cape Flattery on September 1, 1927, thought to be part of Golden Eagle.[126] A silver-colored piece of an aileron washed ashore at Redondo Beach in late October 1927; it may have come from Dallas Spirit, based on the color.[127][128][129]
Two fishermen retrieved the collar of a kapok life jacket on September 9 near Waimanalo Beach on Makapuʻu Point;[130] they stated they had seen the torso of a body in the jacket when they snagged it, but the collar broke free during retrieval.[97][131] In November 1927, a skeletal leg and foot washed ashore at Eureka, California; it was never conclusively tied to the Dole flyers.[132]
A note in a bottle was found near Fleming Point on October 5, 1927 and initially thought to be from Mildred Doran; its authenticity was doubted immediately, as the handwriting was noted to be "that of a woman, small and delicate, but ungrammatically worded".[133] A nearly illegible message was found in a perfume bottle washed ashore near Aberdeen, Washington in August 1928; it purported to be from Mildred Doran and was dated October 2, 1927.[134] Another message in a bottle, purportedly from the crew of Golden Eagle, was turned into Redondo Beach police in August 1928; this was also suspected to be a hoax.[135]
The reward for the return of the aircraft was not withdrawn by James Dole until March 1928.[136]
Martin Jensen piloted Aloha on an aerial search, carrying Denham Scott, Golden Eagle navigator Gordon's brother, in May 1928, looking over the jungle slopes of Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii based on unsubstantiated reports that a monoplane had been spotted there heading for Honolulu on August 17, 1927.[137][138] Denham also led a ground search.[139] In June 1928, Denham announced that he had found an area where an airplane may have made a forced landing. The tops of the trees had been broken off and a burned rag on a stick was placed at the end at the site.[140] He led a second search on Mauna Loa starting in early August;[141] however, no further clues were found and the search was abandoned later that month.[142]
In April 1929, the wreckage of an unidentified aircraft washed ashore near Carmel.[143] Wreckage from one or more airplanes washed ashore at Kamilo Beach in June 1929; one bit apparently was part of a stabilizer, a 30-inch (760 mm) piece of aluminum with a few chips of red, white, and blue paint, matching the livery of Miss Doran.[144] The final search for the missing aviators concluded later that month, as Jack Frost's brother Ezra followed up a theory the Golden Eagle may have crash landed on Mauna Loa.[145]
Aftermath
[edit]In the days after the race, the disqualified owners of the Air King charged that race officials should have disqualified the Golden Eagle, because it also had only 350 gallons of fuel capacity when it took off.[146][147] In a bitter conclusion, the father of the sponsor of the race, Rev. Charles F. Dole, died on November 27, 1927.[148]
Goebel and Davis returned on the Matson liner SS Manoa,[80] with Woolaroc on board,[149] to an impromptu parade in San Francisco, arriving on August 31. They doubted there would be any survivors of a sea ditching.[150][151] For their winning flight, both Goebel (a Lieutenant in the Army Reserves) and Davis (active-duty Navy) were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in 1928.[152][153]
Jensen returned to San Pedro aboard City of Los Angeles on September 1 and immediately announced he would undertake a non-stop solo flight from Los Angeles to New York, carrying a lion.[154] The lion, named Leo, was one of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio mascots; they took off on September 16 after the lion had raw steaks.[155] However, the aircraft never arrived in New York;[156] Jensen crash-landed on an Arizona mountain in heavy fog.[157]
Woolaroc has survived and is on display at the Woolaroc Museum in Oklahoma, which started as a hangar to store and display the plane.[158] Aloha was sold to a New York businessman and destroyed in a 1933 hangar fire at Roosevelt Field.[81] Both Woolaroc and Aloha were powered by the Wright Whirlwind, which added to that engine's endurance legend, as it had already been used in Spirit of St. Louis (Lindbergh), Columbia (Chamberlin/Levine), America (Byrd), Bird of Paradise (Maitland/Hegenberger), and City of Oakland (Smith/Bronte).[56]
Both Ernie Smith, pilot of the first civilian nonstop flight to Hawaii, and Ben Wyatt, navigation examiner for the Dole Air Race, criticized the race after its conclusion. Smith called it "stunt flying – not practical with land planes. And now there are six men and a girl out there somewhere battling for their lives. All for $35,000. It isn't worth it."[159] Wyatt believed that "[no] scientific value can be derived from such flights [with land planes]."[160] Goebel, Davis, and Jensen proposed that all aircraft flying over large bodies of water should be required to carry radio equipment.[161]
Planning for a memorial service at sea occurred in late August and early September.[162][163] A separate service was held by the San Francisco Women's Club on September 8.[164][165] Tributes and flowers were loaded onto SS Maui at the Matson Lines dock on Piers 30 and 32 in San Francisco before it departed for its regular service to Honolulu.[166][167] On September 16, Maui stopped at the spot where the last message was received from the Dallas Spirit to spread the flowers and release a floral Bible made by Miss Doran's students. Each of the seven flyers who died was eulogized and Tennyson's poem "Crossing the Bar" was recited.[110]
Constance Ohl Erwin, the wife of Bill, pilot of Dallas Spirit, gave birth to a son on October 12, 1927 and named him Bill.[168][169]
Davis, navigator of Woolaroc, stated "We know now that flying is a practical means of transportation across the Pacific. All that is necessary is a popular demand for this speedy transportation."[161] Just under one year later, Charles Kingsford Smith and the crew of the Fokker F.VII trimotor Southern Cross successfully flew a trans-Pacific route from Oakland to Australia via Hawaii and Fiji; Smith was carrying Alvin Eichwaldt's ring.[170] The United States Navy set a record for flight time in a successful mass flight from California to Hawaii concluded in January 1934;[171] later that year, Kingsford Smith became the first to fly east from Hawaii to California in November when he retraced his 1928 flight in reverse using Lady Southern Cross, setting a new speed record in the process.[172] In January 1935 Amelia Earhart completed the first solo flight from Hawaii to California.[173] Pan American established a trans-Pacific route later that year during a series of flights,[174] and began regular commercial "Clipper" flying boat service from San Francisco to Manila via Hawaii, Midway, Wake, and Guam in October 1936.[175][176]
Summary of competitors
[edit]Aircraft | Start | Pilot | Navigator | Finish | Notes | Ref. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Reg. | Make & Model | Image | Draw | Launch | |||||
Oklahoma | NX911 | Travel Air 5000 | 1 | 1 | Bennett Griffin | Al Henley | DNS | Forced to return after 30 minutes with fuselage issues. | [177][178] | |
El Encanto | NX5074 | Goddard Special | 2 | 2 | Norman A. Goddard | Kenneth C. Hawkins | DNS | Wrecked on takeoff. | [177][178] [179][180] | |
Pabco Pacific Flyer | NX646 | Breese-Wilde Model 5 | 7 | 3 | Livingston Gilson Irving | DNS | Wrecked after two attempts to take off. | [178] | ||
Golden Eagle | NX913 | Lockheed Vega | 15 | 4 | Jack Frost | Gordon Scott | DNF | Sponsored by George Randolph Hearst, publisher of the San Francisco Examiner. Lost at sea. | [3][94] [123][178] | |
Miss Doran | NX2915 | Buhl Airsedan | 4 | 5 | Auggie Pedlar | Lt. V. R. Knope | DNF | Mildred Doran, namesake, was a passenger. Turned back after 14 minutes due to engine backfire; successfully took off on second attempt. Lost at sea. | [94][178] [181] | |
Aloha | NX914 | Breese-Wilde Model 5 | 11 | 6 | Martin Jensen | Paul Schluter | 2 | [9][178] [181] | ||
Woolaroc | NX869 | Travel Air 5000 | 9 | 7 | Arthur Goebel | William J. Davis | 1 | Finished with 1+1⁄2 US pints (0.71 L) of gas. Name originated from the "woods, lakes, and rocks" on the lands of the corporate sponsor, Phillips Petroleum. | [3][178] [181] | |
Dallas Spirit | NX941 | Swallow Monoplane | 5 | 8 | William Portwood Erwin | Alvin Eichwaldt | DNS | Originally to be navigated by Erwin's wife, Constance. Forced to return with engine trouble. Lost at sea while searching for missing Miss Doran and Golden Eagle. | [3][178] |
Aircraft | Start | Pilot | Navigator | Notes | Ref. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Reg. | Make & Model | Image | Draw | ||||
City of Peoria | NX3070 | Air King biplane | 3 | Charles Parkhurst | Ralph Lowes | Disqualified for inadequate fuel capacity. Alternate pilots Dick Grace or Ernest Smith; Smith was the first civilian to fly nonstop to Hawaii, crashing on Molokai in City of Oakland.[181][182] | [178] | |
Wanda | NX1445 | Hess Bluebird[183] | 6 | Frederick A. Giles | Unable to meet qualification deadline of 10 AM on August 15. Attempted flight to Australia via Honolulu in November 1927; landed at San Simeon instead. | [61][67] [184][185] | ||
Pride of Los Angeles | International CF-10 | 8 | James L. Giffin | Theodore S. Lundgren | Crashed into San Francisco Bay on approach to Oakland August 11, both survived. | [9][47] [186] | ||
— | — | — | 10 | Robert C. Fowler | Unable to purchase plane; withdrew. | [32][187] | ||
Miss Hollydale | NX912 | International F-17W biplane | 12 | Frank L. Clarke | Jeff Warren | Announced withdrawal from competition and left abruptly on August 13. | [65][188] | |
Spirit of John Rodgers | Tremaine Hummingbird | 13 | George D. Covell | Richard S. Waggener | Original navigator L.P. Pawlikowski withdrew August 8 with illness. Crashed at Point Loma enroute to start of race on August 10. No survivors. | [3][189] | ||
Angel of Los Angeles | NX705 | Bryant Monoplane | 14 | Arthur V. Rogers | Crashed during test flight at Western Air Express Field (Montebello) on August 12. No survivors.[190] [191][192] |
[9] |
Notes
- PN-9 refers to the unsuccessful 1925 Navy attempt
- Bird of Paradise is the successful June 1927 Maitland/Hegenberger flight
- City of Oakland is misspelled as Spirit and refers to the July 1927 Smith/Bronte flight and crash landing
- Miss Doran is misspelled as Dorian
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
- ^ "Dole Derby". Retrieved 23 August 2011.
- ^ a b c d e Burlingame, Burl (December 29, 2003). "The Dole Derby, Chapter 1: The Pineapple King's Great Pacific Air Race". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
- ^ "Offers $25,000 to First to Cross the Pacific". Calexico Chronicle. Associated Press. May 25, 1927. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
- ^ "Los Angeles to Tokio Air Trip Prize $30,000". Healdsburg Tribune. No. 171. United Press. May 26, 1927. p. 1. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ "$25,000 Will Go to Flyer for Success". Madera Tribune. Vol. XL, no. 36. United Press. June 14, 1927. p. 1. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ a b Peeler, Tom (February 1985). "Nostalgia Plane Crazy: How Lone Star Bill lifted the Dallas Spirit". D Magazine. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ "Complete Rules for Flight to Honolulu". San Pedro News-Pilot. May 28, 1927. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f Conant, Jane Eshleman (October 10, 1955). "Death Dogged the Dolebirds: Pioneer Pacific Fliers Wrote Tragic Chapter in Air History". San Francisco Call-Bulletin. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- ^ "Army Fliers Land in Hawaii; Nation Honors New Heroes". San Pedro Daily News. AP. June 29, 1927. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
- ^ Rodgers, Cmdr. John (September 12, 1925). "Rodgers Reviews History of Flight". San Bernardino Sun. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
- ^ Grover, David H. (14 June 2012). "Emory Bronte and Ernie Smith: Flew from California to Hawaii in 1927". HistoryNet. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
- ^ a b Smith, Ernie (January 1931). "Ocean Flights Are the Bunk!". Popular Aviation. Vol. 8, no. 1. Aeronautical Publications. pp. 22–24, 58. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
- ^ Plane and Pilot. July 1967.
{{cite journal}}
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- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Conant, Jane (1958). "$35,000 Race to Death". In Brent, Rafer (ed.). Great Adventure Stories. New York: Bartholomew House. pp. 175–190.
- ^ "San Francisco's New Airport Is Prepared for Dole Race for Honolulu, Is Report". San Pedro Daily News. AP. July 22, 1927. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
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- ^ "Expects Another Plane". San Pedro Daily News. AP. July 7, 1927. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ "Grace to Fly in Dole Race. Hawaii-California Flier Who Crashed to Enter Competition". The New York Times. 7 July 1927. p. 4.
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- ^ "Fox Theatre". Coronado Eagle and Journal. April 20, 1932. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ "2 Navy Airmen Entering Dole Hawaii Flight". San Pedro Daily News. August 1, 1927. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
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- ^ "Withdraws from Race". Healdsburg Tribune. August 10, 1927. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ "'Movie' Party Arrives Here for Location". Calexico Chronicle. November 12, 1927. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
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- ^
"DOLE PRIZE FLIERS GUARD THEIR AEROS AS TAKE-OFF NEARS". The Washington Post. 16 August 1927.
Missing Compass Causes Talk of Vandalism in Tense Camp. KING OF AIR UNABLE TO PASS FULL TESTS Eight Machines Qualify to Fly Over the Pacific at Noon Today. DOLE PRIZE AIRMEN GUARD THEIR PLANES
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- ^ a b "Navy Renews Golden Eagle Search; Tug Ordered: Dispatch Boat Northwest of Hawaii in Hunt". San Pedro Daily News. AP. September 30, 1927. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
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- ^ "Body Located Thought One of Missing Flyers". Healdsburg Tribune. United Press. September 12, 1927. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Bones Washed Ashore at Eureka May Be Flyer's". Healdsburg Tribune. Tribune Service. November 17, 1927. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
- ^ "Doubt bottle as of Doran Origin". Santa Cruz Evening News. AP. October 5, 1927. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Doran Message Found in Bottle". San Bernardino Sun. United Press. August 23, 1928. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
- ^ "Note Written on Shirt Signed by Honolulu Fliers?". San Pedro News-Pilot. United Press. August 28, 1928. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Ocean Fliers Reward Fund Is Withdrawn". San Bernardino Sun. Associated Press. March 18, 1928. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
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- ^ "Dead Dole Flyer's Brother on Search". Press Democrat. AP. May 12, 1928. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
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- ^ "Search". Livermore Journal. August 2, 1928. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
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- ^ "RULES WAIVED FOR LOST DOLE PLANE, IS CHARGE: Golden Eagle Had Less Fuel Than Required, Airways System Declares. TELEGRAM TO M'CRACKEN". The Washington Post. 19 August 1927.
- ^ "Owners of Golden Eagle File Charges in Washington". Healdsburg Tribune. United Press. August 18, 1927. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
- ^ "REV. CHARLES F. DOLE DIES.: Peace Advocate Was Father of Sponsor of Dole Air Race". The New York Times. 28 September 1927.
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- ^ "WINNERS OF DOLE RACE BACK, BOWED IN SORROW: Goebel Says He Entertains No Hope for Seven Who Did Not Finish". The Washington Post. 1 September 1927.
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- ^ Ranch delights children; The Joplin Globe, by John Hacker, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 2000
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- ^ "Third Plane in Race to Crash". The New York Times. Aug. 13, 1927.
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Further reading
[edit]- "The Dole Pacific Race". Aero Digest. Vol. 11, no. 3. September 1927. pp. 250–255, 366.
- Conant, Jane Eshleman (October 10, 1955). "Death Dogged the Dolebirds: Pioneer Pacific Fliers Wrote Tragic Chapter in Air History". San Francisco Call-Bulletin. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- Conant, Jane (1958). "$35,000 Race to Death". In Brent, Rafer (ed.). Great Adventure Stories. New York: Bartholomew House. pp. 175–200.
- Dealey, Ted (July 1959). "'The Dallas Spirit': The Last Fool Flight". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 63 (1): 15–30. JSTOR 30235716.
- Forden, Lesley (1961). Glory Gamblers: The Story of the Dole Race. New York: Ballantine Books.
- Horvat, William J. (1966). "VI: All the Way & VII: Enter the Civilians". Above the Pacific. Aero Publishers, Inc. pp. 59–89.
- Forden, Leslie N. (Fall 1975). "Part 1". Journal of the American Aviation Historical Society. 20 (3).
- Forden, Leslie N. (Winter 1975). "Part 2". Journal of the American Aviation Historical Society. 20 (4).
- "The Dole Race to Hawaii: The wildest air derby of them all (Part 1)". FAA General Aviation News. Flight Standards Service, Federal Aviation Administration. May 1978. pp. 11–13.
- "The Conclusion of the Dole Race: Unreliable navigation led Hawaii-bound airmen to watery grave (Part 2)". FAA General Aviation News. Flight Standards Service, Federal Aviation Administration. June 1978. pp. 11–13.
- Rasmussen, Cecilia (October 12, 1997). "Pacific Quest Brought Dark Days for Aviation". Los Angeles Times.
- Burlingame, Burl (1986). "The Dole Derby". Honolulu Star-Bulletin
- Burlingame, Burl (December 29, 2003). "Chapter 1: The Pineapple King's Great Pacific Air Race". Honolulu Star-Bulletin.
- Burlingame, Burl (January 5, 2004). "Chapter 2: In which aeroplane crews take off with dreams of glory blinding their common sense". Honolulu Star-Bulletin.
- Burlingame, Burl (January 12, 2004). "Chapter 3: Conclusion". Honolulu Star-Bulletin.
- Kurutz, Gary F. (2009). "Triumph and Tragedy over the Pacific: The 1927 Dole Air Race" (PDF). California State Library Foundation Bulletin (93). California State Library Foundation: 7–13.
- Hyatt, Gary W. (October 2009). Winners' Viewpoints: The Great 1927 Dole Race. self (Oldairfield, LLC). ISBN 9781520437200.
- LaVO, Carl (2013). "5: Worlds to Conquer". Pushing the Limits: The Remarkable Life and Times of Vice Adm. Allan Rockwell McCann, USN. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. pp. 43–58. ISBN 978-1-61251-334-8.
- Ryan, Jason (August 2018). Race to Hawaii: The 1927 Dole Air Derby and the thrilling first flights that opened the Pacific. Chicago, Illinois: Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-0-912777-25-2.
External links
[edit]- Dole Air Race at Flickr Commons via San Diego Air and Space Museum
- Movie reel of the Dole Air Race [1]
- This day in Aviation, extensive account and pictures from Dole Air Race
- "Arthur C. Goebel". Davis-Monthan Airfield Register Website. November 2009. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- Martin Jensen papers at the American Heritage Center