St. John’s celebrates 100-year anniversary of first non-stop transatlantic flight
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The city of St. John’s, known for its seafaring roots, is commemorating its aviation history today, 100 years to the day after two young British war veterans took off from Newfoundland in a Vickers Vimy airplane headed across the Atlantic.
When they landed in Ireland 16 hours later, John Alcock and Arthur Brown entered the history books as the first people to fly non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean.
Gary Hebbard, a retired journalist who writes on aviation history, said the June 14, 1919 flight represents a turning point that shaped the development of modern aviation as we know it.
“Alcock and Brown did it in one hop,” Hebbard said. “The significance of that really can’t be overstated. That’s kind of the genesis of the aviation industry we have today.”