Transatlantic Fever

In 1919 Raymond Orteig, a New York hotel owner offered a prize of $25,000 for the first nonstop aircraft flight between New York and Paris. By the mid 1920’s, airplanes had finally developed enough to make such a flight possible. The first aviators to go for the prize paid with their lives. Others were still willing to take the chance and Roosevelt Field became their headquarters. Several famous aviators arrived at the field and the public followed their plans with intense interest. Then in May, 1927, a new plane quietly flew in from the west. An unknown, young, airmail pilot, Charles Lindbergh, had arrived.

Right: Raymond Orteig, owner of the Brevoort Hotel in Greenwich Village and sponsor of the transatlantic prize.

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