1941 CIRCUMNAVIGATION OF GLOBE
BY PAN AM'S "PACIFIC CLIPPER"
Courtesy of Ken Tinkcom.
The Round The World
Saga of the "Pacific Clipper"
John A. Marshall
Engines: Four (4) 1,600 hp
(1,192 kW) Wright R-2600 Twin Cyclone (1,192 kW), 14 cylinder, air-cooled,
radial engines.
Wing Span: 152 ft. (46.33 m.)
Length: 106 ft (32.31 m.)
Max T.O. Weight: 84,000 lb. (38,102
kg.)
Max level speed: 199 mph (320
km/h)
Cruising speed: 184 mph (296
km/h)
Range: 5,200 miles (8369 km)
First flight: June 7, 1938
Ceiling: 19,600 feet
Accommodation: 10 crew, 74
passengers
December 7, 1941 the first
blush of dawn tinged the eastern sky and sent its rosy fingers creeping
onto the flight deck of the huge triple-tailed flying boat as she cruised high
above the South Pacific. Six days out of her homeport of San Francisco, the
Boeing 314 was part of Pan American Airways' growing new service that
linked the far corners of the Pacific Ocean. With veteran Captain Robert
Ford in command, the Pacific Clipper, carrying 12 passengers and a crew of
ten was just a few hours from landing in the harbor at Auckland, New Zealand.
The
calm serenity of the flight deck early on this spring morning was suddenly
shattered by the crackling of the radio. Radio Operator John Poindexter
clamped the headset to his ears as he deciphered the coded message. His eyes
widened as he quickly wrote the characters on the pad in front of him. Pearl
Harbor had been attacked by Japanese warplanes and had suffered heavy losses. The
United States was at war.
The stunned crew looked at
each other as the implications of the message began to dawn. They realized that
their route back to California was irrevocably cut and there was no going back.
Ford ordered radio silence and then posted lookouts in the navigator's blister.
Two hours later, the Pacific Clipper touched down smoothly on the waters
of Auckland, New Zealand harbor. Their odyssey was just beginning.
The crew haunted
the overwhelmed communications room at the US Embassy in Auckland every
day for a week waiting for a message from Pan Am headquarters in New York.
Finally they received word -- they were to try and make it back to the
United States the long way, around the world westbound.
For Ford and his crew it
was a daunting assignment. Facing a journey of over 30,000 miles, over oceans
and lands that none of them had ever seen, they would have to do all their own
planning and servicing, scrounging whatever supplies and equipment
they needed, all this in the face of an erupting World War in which
political alliances and loyalties in may parts of the world were uncertain
at best.
Their first assignment
was to return to Noumea, back the way they had come over a week
earlier. They were to pick up the Pan American station personnel there,
and then deliver them to safety in Australia.
Late on the evening of
December 16th, the blacked out flying boat lifted off from Auckland harbor and
headed northwest through the night toward Noumea. They maintained radio
silence, landing in the harbor just as the sun was coming up. Ford went
ashore and sought out the Pan Am Station Manager. "Round up all your
peopleÓ, he said. "I want them all at the dock in an hour. They can have
one small bag apiece.Ó
The crew set to work fueling the
airplane and exactly two hours later, fully fueled and carrying a barrel
of engine oil, the Clipper took off and pointed her nose south for Australia.
It was late in the afternoon when the dark green smudge of the Queensland
coast appeared in the windscreen, and Ford began a gentle descent for
landing in the harbor at Gladstone. After offloading their bewildered
passengers, the crew set about seeing to their primary responsibility -- the
Pacific Clipper.
Captain Ford recounted,
"I was wondering how we were going to pay for everything we were
going to need on this trip. We had money enough for a trip to Auckland and back
to San Francisco, but this was a different story. In Gladstone a young man
who was a banker came up to me and out of the blue said, 'How are you
fixed for money?Õ 'Well, we're broke!Õ I said. He said, 'I'll probably be shot
for this,Õ but he went down to his bank on a Saturday morning, opened the vault
and handed me five hundred American dollars.
Since Rod Brown, our
navigator, was the only one with a lock box and a key, we put him in
charge of the money. That $500 financed the rest of the trip all the way
to New York.Ó ford planned to take off and head straight northwest, across
the Queensland desert for Darwin, and then fly across the Timor Sea to the
Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), hoping that Java and Sumatra remained
in friendly hands.
The next day, as they droned
into the tropical morning, the coastal jungle gradually gave way to great arid
stretches of grassland and sand dunes. Spinnifex and gum trees covered
the landscape to the horizon. During the entire flight to Darwin the crew
didnÕt see a river big enough to set down the big flying boat should
anything go wrong. Any emergency would force them to belly land the airplane
onto the desert, and their flight would be over. They approached the
harbor at Darwin late in the afternoon. Massive thunderheads stretched
across the horizon and continuous flashes of lightning lit up the cockpit. The northernmost
city in Australia, Darwin was closest to the conflict that was spreading
southward like a brushfire. A rough frontier town in the most remote and
primitive of the Australian territories, it was like something out of a wild
west movie.
After they had landed, the
Pacific Clipper crew was offered a place to shower and change. Much to
their amusement their "locker roomÓ turned out to be an Australian
Army brothel. Ford and his crew set about fueling the airplane. It was a
lengthy, tiresome job. The fuel was stored in five-gallon jerry cans
and each one had to be hauled up over the wing and emptied into the
tanks.
It was past midnight before
they were finished. They managed a few hours of fitful sleep before
takeoff, but Ford was anxious to be under way. News of the progress of the
Japanese forces was sketchy at best. They were fairly certain that most of
the Dutch East Indies was still in friendly hands, but they could not dally. Early
the next morning they took off for Surabaya on the island of
Java, fourteen hundred miles to the west across the Timor Sea. The sun
rose as they droned on across the flat turquoise sea. Soon they raised the
eastern islands of the great archipelago of east Java. Rude thatch-roofed huts
dotted the beaches; the islands were carpeted with the lush green jungle
of the tropics.
Surabaya lay at the closed end of a large
bay in the Bali Sea. The second largest city on the island of Java, it was
guarded by a British garrison and a squadron of Bristol Beaufort fighters.
As the Pacific Clipper
approached the city, a single fighter rose to meet them. Moments later it was
joined by several more. The recognition signals that Ford had received in
Australia proved to be inaccurate and the big Boeing was a sight unfamiliar to
the British pilots. The crew tensed as the fighters drew closer. Because of a
quirk in the radio systems, they could hear the British pilots, but
the pilots could not hear the Clipper. There was much discussion
among them as to whether the flying boat should be shot down or allowed to
land. At last the crew heard the British controller grant permission for them
to land and then add, "If they do anything suspicious, shoot them out
of the sky!Ó With great relief, Ford began a very careful approach.
As
they neared the harbor, Ford could see that it was filled with warships,
so he set the Clipper down in the smooth water just outside the harbor
entrance. "We turned around to head backÓ, Ford said. "There was
a launch that had come out to meet us, but instead of giving us a tow or a
line, they stayed off about a mile and kept waving us on. Finally, when we
got farther into the harbor they came closer. It turned out that we had
landed right in the middle of a minefield and they weren't about to come
near us until they saw that we were through it!" When they
disembarked, the crew of the Pacific Clipper received an unpleasant
surprise. They were told that they would be unable to refuel with 100-octane
aviation gas. What little there was severely rationed and was reserved for the
military. There was automobile gas in abundance, however, and Ford was
welcome to whatever he needed.
He had no choice. The next leg
of their journey would be many hours over the Indian Ocean and there was
no hope of refueling elsewhere. The flight engineers, Swede Roth and Jocko
Parish, formulated a plan that they hoped would work. They transferred all
their remaining aviation fuel to the two fuselage tanks and filled the
remaining tanks to the limit with the lower octane automobile gas.
"We
took off from Surabaya on the 100 octane, climbed a couple of thousand
feet, and pulled back the power to cool off the enginesÓ, said Ford "Then
we switched to the automobile gas and held our breaths. The engines almost
jumped out of their mounts, but they ran. We figured it was either that or
leave the airplane to the Japs."
They flew northwesterly
across the Sunda Straits, paralleling the coast of Sumatra. Chasing the
setting sun, they started across the vast expanse of ocean. They had no
aviation charts or maps for this part of the world. The only navigational
information available to the crew was the latitude and longitude of their
destination at Trincomalee, on the island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka).
Using this data, and
drawing from memory, Rod Brown was creating his own Mercator maps of
South Asia. Ford was not only worried about finding the harbor, he was
very concerned about missing Ceylon altogether. He envisioned the Clipper
droning on over India, lost and low on fuel, unable to find a body of
water on which to land.
As they neared the island they
could see a cloudbank ahead. Ford said, "There was some low scud, so we
descended. We wanted the maximum available visibility to permit picking up
landfall at the earliest moment; we didn't want to miss the island. All of
a sudden there it was, right in front of us, a Jap submarine! We
could see the crew running for the deck gun. Let me tell you we were
pretty busy getting back into the scud again!Ó
Ford jammed the
throttles of the Clipper forward to climb power, the engines complaining
bitterly. Their 150 mph speed soon had them well out of range of the sub's guns, and
the crew heaved a sigh of relief. It would be difficult to determine who
was the more surprised; the Japanese submarine commander or the crew
of the Clipper, startled out of their reverie after the long flight.
It
was another hour until they reached the island, and the Boeing finally touched
water in the harbor at Trincomalee. The British Forces stationed there
were anxious to hear what Ford and his crew had to report from the war zone to
the east, and the crew was duly summoned to a military meeting.
Presiding was a pompous
Royal Navy Commodore who informed Ford in no uncertain terms that he
doubted Ford would know a submarine if it ran over him. Ford felt the hackles
rise on the back of his neck. He realized that he could not afford to make
an enemy of the British military as the fate of the Pacific Clipper rested
too heavily in their hands. He swallowed hard and said nothing.
It
was Christmas Eve when they began the takeoff from Ceylon and turned the
ship again to the northwest. The heavily loaded Boeing struggled for altitude, laboring
through the leaden humid air. Suddenly there was a frightening bang as the
number three engine let go. It shuddered in its mount, and as they peered
through the windscreen the crew could see gushes of black oil pouring back
over the wing. Ford quickly shut the engine down and wheeled the Clipper
over into a 180 degree turn, heading back to Trincomalee.
Less than an hour after
takeoff the Pacific Clipper was back on the waters of Trincomalee harbor. The
repairs to the engine took the rest of Christmas Eve and all of Christmas
Day. One of the engine's eighteen cylinders had failed, wrenching itself
loose from its mount, and while the repair was not particularly complex,
it was tedious and time-consuming.
Finally, early in the morning
of December 26th, they took off from Ceylon for the second time. All day they
droned across the lush carpet of the Indian sub continent, and then cut across
the northeastern corner of the Arabian Sea to their landing in Karachi, India (now
Pakistan) touching down in mid-afternoon.
The following day, bathed
and refreshed they took off and flew westward across the Gulf of Oman
toward Saudi Arabia. After just a bit over eight routine hours of flying,
they landed in Bahrain where there was a British garrison.
Another
frustration presented itself the following morning as they were planning
the next leg of their journey. They had planned to fly straight west across the
Arabian peninsula and the Red Sea into Africa, a flight that would not have
been much longer than the leg they had just completed from Karachi.
"When
we were preparing to leave Bahrain we were warned by the British authorities
not to fly across Arabia," said Ford. The Saudis had apparently already
caught some British fliers who had been forced down there. The natives had dug
a hole, buried them in it up to their necks, and just left
them."
They took off into the grey morning and climbed
through a solid overcast.
They broke out of the clouds
into the dazzling sunshine and the carpet of clouds below stretched westward to
the horizon. "We flew north for about twenty minutes," Ford said. "Then
we turned west and headed straight across Saudi Arabia. We flew for several
hours before there was a break in the clouds below us, and damned if we weren't
smack over the Mosque at Mecca! I could see the people pouring out of it. It was
just like kicking an anthill. They were probably firing at us, but at least
they didn't have any anti-aircraft."
The Pacific Clipper
crossed the Red Sea and the coast of Africa in the early afternoon with the
Saharan sun streaming in the cockpit windows.
The land below was a dingy
yellowish brown, with nothing but rolling sand dunes and stark rocky outcroppings.
The only sign of human habitation was an occasional hut. Every so often they
flew over small clusters of men tending livestock who stopped and shielded
their eyes from the sun, staring up at the strange bird that made such a noise.
The crew's prayers for the continued good health of the four Wright Cyclones
became more and more fervent. Should they have to make an emergency landing
here they would be in dire straits indeed.
Later in the afternoon they
raised the Nile River and Ford turned the ship to follow it to the
confluence of the White and Blue Nile, just below Khartoum in the Sudan. They
landed in the river, and after they were moored, the crew went ashore to be
greeted by the now familiar hospitality of the Royal Air Force. Ford's plan was
to continue southwest to Leopoldville in the Belgian Congo and begin their
South Atlantic crossing there. He had no desire to set out across the Sahara; a
forced landing in that vast trackless wasteland would not only render the
aircraft forever immobile, but the crew would surely perish in the harshness of
the desert.
Early the next morning they took off from the Nile for
Leopoldville. This was to be a particularly long overland flight and they
wanted to leave plenty of daylight for the arrival. They would land on the
Congo River at Leopoldville and from there would strike out across the South
Atlantic for South America.
The endless brown of the Sudan
gave way to rolling green hills and then rocky crests that stretched across
their path. They flew over native villages and great gatherings of
wildlife. Herds of wildebeest, hundreds of thousands strong, stampeded in panic
as the Clipper roared overhead. The grassland soon turned to jungle and they
crossed several small rivers, which they tried to match to their maps. Suddenly
ahead they saw a large river much bigger and wider than others they had
crossed, and off to their right was a good-sized town. The river had to be the
mighty Congo and the town was Bumba, the largest settlement on the river at
that point. >From their maps they saw that they could turn and follow the
river downstream to Leopoldville. They had five hundred miles to
fly.
Late in the afternoon they
raised the Congolese capital of Leopoldville. Ford set the Boeing down gently
onto the river and he immediately realized the strength of the current. He
powered the ship into the mooring and the crew finally stepped ashore. It was
like stepping into a sauna. The heat was the most oppressive they had yet
encountered. It descended on them like a cloak, sapping what energy they had
left.
A pleasant surprise awaited them, however, when two familiar
faces greeted them at the dock. A Pan American Airport Manager and a Radio
Officer had been dispatched to meet them, and Ford was handed a cold beer. "That
was one of the high points of the whole trip," he said.
After
a night ashore they went to the airplane the next morning and prepared for the
long over-water leg that would take them back to the western hemisphere. The
terrible heat and humidity had not abated a bit when the hatches were finally
secured and they swung the Clipper into the river channel for the takeoff.
The airplane was loaded
to the gunnels with fuel, plus the drum of oil that had come aboard at Noumea. It was,
to put it mildly, just a bit overloaded. They headed downstream into the wind,
going with the six-knot current. Just beyond the limits of the town
the river changed from a placid downstream current into a cataract of
rushing rapids, pillars of rocks broke the water into a tumbling maelstrom. Ford
held the engines at takeoff power and the crew held their breath while the
airplane gathered speed on the glassy river. The heat and humidity and their
tremendous gross weight were all factors working against them as they struggled
to get the machine off the water before the cataracts.
Ford rocked the hull with the
elevators, trying to get the Boeing up on the step. Just before they would
enter the rapids and face certain destruction, the hull lifted free. The
Pacific Clipper was flying, but just barely. Their troubles were far from
over, however. Just beyond the cataracts they entered the steep gorges; it was
as though they were flying into a canyon. With her wings bowed, the
Clipper staggered, clawing for every inch of altitude.
The engines had been at take-off
power for nearly five minutes and the their temperatures were rapidly
climbing above the red line. How much more abuse could those
engines take? With agonizing slowness the big Boeing began to climb, foot
by perilous foot. At last they were clear of the walls of the gorge and
Ford felt he could pull the throttles back to climb power. He turned the
airplane toward the west and the Atlantic Ocean. The crew, silent, listened
intently to the beat of the engines. They roared on without a miss, and as the
airplane finally settled down at their cruising altitude Ford decided they
could safely head for Brazil, over three thousand miles to the west.
The crew felt
revived with new energy, and in spite of their fatigue, they were excitedly optimistic.
Against all odds they had crossed southern Asia and breasted the African
continent. Their airplane was performing better than they had any right to
expect, and after their next long ocean leg, they would be back in the
hemisphere from which they had begun their journey nearly a month before.
The interior of the airplane
that had been home to them for so many days was beginning to wear rather thin. They
were sick of the endless hours spent droning westward, tired of the
apprehension of the unknown and frustrated by the lack of any real
meaningful news about what was happening in a world besieged by war. They just
wanted to get home.
After being airborne over twenty hours, they
landed in the harbor at Natal, Brazil just before noon. While they were waiting
for the necessary immigration formalities to be completed, the Brazilian
authorities insisted that the crew disembark while the interior of the airplane
was sprayed for yellow fever. Two men in rubber suits and masks boarded and
fumigated the airplane.
Late that same afternoon they took off for
Trinidad, following the Brazilian coast as it curved around to the northwest. It
wasn't until after they had departed that the crew made an unpleasant
discovery. Most of their personal papers and money were missing, along with a
military chart that had been entrusted to Navigator Rod Brown by the US
military attachŽ in Leopoldville, obviously stolen by the
Brazilian "fumigatorsÓ.
The sun set as they crossed the
mouth of the Amazon, nearly a hundred miles wide where it joins the sea. Across
the Guineas in the dark they droned, and finally at 0300 hours the
following morning they landed at Trinidad. There was a Pan Am station at
Port of Spain and they happily delivered themselves and their weary charge
into friendly hands.
The final leg to New York was almost
anti-climactic. Just before six on the bitter morning of January 6th, the
control officer in the Marine Terminal at La Guardia was startled to hear
his radio crackle into life with the message, "Pacific Clipper, inbound
from Auckland, New Zealand, Captain Ford reporting. Overhead in five minutes.Ó
In
a final bit of irony, after over thirty thousand miles and two hundred hours of
flying on their epic journey, the Pacific Clipper had to circle for nearly
an hour, because no landings were permitted in the harbor until
official sunrise. They finally touched down just before seven, the
spray from their landing freezing as it hit the hull. No matter --- the
Pacific Clipper had made it home.
The significance of the flight
is best illustrated by the records that were set by Ford and his crew.
It was the first
round-the-world flight by a commercial airliner, as well as the longest
continuous flight by a commercial plane. It was the first circumnavigation
following a route near the Equator (they crossed the Equator four times.) They
touched all but two of the world's seven continents, flew 31,500 miles in
209 hours, and made 18 stops under the flags of 12 different nations. They also
made the longest non-stop flight in Pan American's history, a 3,583 mile
crossing of the South Atlantic from Africa to Brazil.
As the war
progressed, it became clear that neither the Army nor the Navy was
equipped or experienced enough to undertake the tremendous amount of long
distance air transport work required. Pan American Airways was one of the
few airlines in the country with the personnel and expertise to supplement
the military air forces. Captain Bob Ford and most of his crew spent the war
flying contract missions for the US Armed Forces. After the war Ford continued
flying for Pan American, which was actively expanding its routes across the
Pacific and around the world. He left the airline in 1952 to pursue other
aviation interests.
The Crew of Pacific Clipper:
Captain Robert Ford
First Officer John H. Mack
Second Officer/ Navigator
Roderick N. Brown,
Third Officer James G. Henriksen,
Fourth Officer John D. Steers,
First Engineer Homans K. "Swede"
Roth,
Second Engineer John B. "Jocko"
Parish,
First Radio Officer John
Poindexter,
Second Radio Officer Oscar
Hendrickson,
Purser Barney Sawicki ,
Asst Purser Verne C. Edwards
Poindexter was originally
scheduled to accompany the Pacific Clipper as far as Los Angeles and then
return to San Francisco. He had even asked his wife to hold dinner that evening.
In Los Angeles, however, the regularly scheduled Radio Officer suddenly became ill
and Poindexter had to make the trip himself. His one shirt was washed in every
port that the Pacific Clipper visited.
This article originally
appeared in the August 1999 Issue of "Air and Space Magazine" and is
reprinted by permission of the author