a map showing the north Atlantic ocean.
Storia

The battle to cross the Atlantic

Nungesser and Coli, pioneers of transatlantic flight

Who were the pilots that tried to be the first to cross the Atlantic by plane?

di
Europeana Foundation

Next week, I will be crossing the Atlantic Ocean on a non-stop flight from Amsterdam to Philadelphia. A common occurrence I hear you say - however, a little over 100 years ago, people were literally dying in their attempts to fly this particular stretch of ‘the pond’.

Today, it is a totally different story. Along with the flight I will be taking, tens of thousands of other commercial flights each week cross the Atlantic Ocean and make the world a smaller place.

When were the first transatlantic flights?

In the 1920s, it was an unattained human and engineering feat that could be compared with man landing on the moon in the 1960s.

But look at what progress has been made: in 2010 alone, 2.5 million passengers crossed the Atlantic between London Heathrow and New York JFK airports, the busiest transatlantic route by a large margin.

The Atlantic Ocean stood as a significant obstacle to the aviation pioneers of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Now it is simply a way of getting from A to B - thanks to the efforts of a few brave aviators that we remember today.

Who were Charles Nungesser and François Coli?

On 8 May 1927, two French aviation heroes and veterans of World War I set off on an ill-fated flight.

black and white portrait photograph of two men, standing side by side.
black and white photograph, a man in uniform stands next to a small airplane.

Charles Nungesser and François Coli took off on a journey in an attempt to pilot the first non-stop transatlantic flight with a fixed-wing aircraft and bag the $25,000 Orteig Prize.

The prize was offered in May 1919 by New York hotel owner Raymond Orteig to the first allied aviator(s) to fly non-stop from New York City to Paris or vice-versa. 

Most attempted to fly from New York to Paris, but a number of French aviators including Nungesser and Coli, planned an attempt to fly in the opposite direction, from Paris to New York. The pair flew a specially built Levasseur PL.8, a single engine, two-seat long-distance biplane aircraft modified from an existing Levasseur PL.4.

black and white postcard with a photograph of a small bi-plane with two circular photographs of two men superimposed.

What happened to L'Oiseau Blanc?

The aircraft took off from Paris.

The intended flight path was a great circular route, which would have taken them across the English Channel, over the southwestern part of England and Ireland, across the Atlantic to Newfoundland, then south over Nova Scotia, to Boston, and finally to a water landing in New York.

Crowds of people gathered in New York to witness the historic arrival, with tens of thousands of people crowding Battery Park in Manhattan to have a good view of the Statue of Liberty, where the aircraft was scheduled to touch down.

After their estimated time of arrival had passed, with no word as to the aircraft's fate, it was realised that the aircraft had been lost.

The disappearance of L'Oiseau Blanc is considered one of the great mysteries in the history of aviation.

Who was the first aviator to cross the Atlantic?

Several famous aviators made unsuccessful attempts at the New York to Paris flight before relatively unknown American Charles Lindbergh won the prize in 1927 in his aircraft Spirit of Saint Louis.

The disappearance of L'Oiseau Blanc has been called 'the Everest of aviation mysteries'.

If the aircraft had successfully completed its journey, Lindbergh would probably not have made his own historic flight, and might instead have set his sights on crossing the Pacific. This might have prevented Amelia Earhart from attempting her own journey.

When Lindbergh did succeed with his own flight across the Atlantic, the international attention on his achievement was probably enhanced because of the disappearance of 'L'Oiseau Blanc just days earlier.

So the next time you are on a transatlantic flight, at 30,000 feet looking down at the mass expanse of the Atlantic, spare a thought for the pioneers who were brave enough to advance humanity’s ambitions to go faster, further and higher.