ATLANTIC
CROSSINGS
A PERSISTENCE OF VISION
ABOUT "ATLANTIC CROSSINGS"
Not many stories in the development of the modern world have more importance than the growing connection down the centuries between the "Old" and "New" Worlds, particularly in regards to what happened across the Atlantic.
The first transatlantic connections between Europe and North America are lost in the mists of time. The lure of the unseen shore has been with us for a long time, leaving only legends, scant archeological remains, and ancient hearsay to provide any records. But by the end of the 15th. century, we do know about Atlantic crossings — first a trickle, then a growing tide of travel between the continents on either side of the Atlantic.
Any crossing by ship, let alone in comfort, remained a tentative venture for centuries. The trip remained slow and subject to wind, weather, and wooden hulls.
It wasn't until the late 19th century, after ships were built of steel, and powered by steam, that the trip began to take on something resembling an experience we'd consider as modern travel.
Great ocean liners didn't appear until shortly before the advent of powered flight at the dawn of the 20th century.
And at that point, the dream of intercontinental travel began to take off towards a new paradigm altogether. The question then became: Can we cross the Atlantic by air? The answer was, after many attempts on both sides of the Atlantic, yes.
1909
LOUIS BLÉRIOT
"FIRST SUCCESSFUL FLIGHT OVER A LARGE BODY OF WATER"
On July 25, 1909 Louis Blériot crossed the English channel flying his little Type XI monoplane, in a dramatic thirty-two-mile, thirty-seven minute flight. His achievement made history as the "first successful flight over a large body of water..."
"The weather became turbulent, and visibility declined; he later recalled thinking - I am alone. I can see nothing at all. At Dover, the wind nearly caused him to crash, and his landing gear and propeller were damaged. But he had made it..."
- National Air and Space Museum-
PAN AM'S LONG-AWAITED ATLANTIC SUCCESS
"ATLANTIC CROSSINGS" EXHIBITS
OCEAN CHALLENGE 1912-1919
Aerial pioneering at the start of the 20th century | Juan Trippe's youthful fascination with flight | First attempts to fly the Atlantic.
A VISION ACHIEVED 1939
Juan Trippe's new commercial ventures | Pan Am's flying boat designs | Geopolitics | Far-reaching Atlantic survey flights.
WAR CLOUDS 1940
Rapid, extraordinary advances in aviation technology and infrastructure | How Pan Am prepared the way across the Atlantic in a time of war.
U.S. AT WAR 1941-1945
Crucial assets for the U.S. at war: PAA's global network & advanced technology | Developing airfields and seaplane bases | Transport of supplies and troops, Natal to Africa | Special missions.
ATLANTIC TRIUMPH & BEYOND
Pan Am's Postwar travel boom & luxury travel | Reaching far-flung destinations in hours instead of days | The debut of the Jet Age | The Jumbo Jet sensation.
TRANSATLANTIC ADS
Pan Am's unprecedented air passenger experience | Air Cargo | Amenities and comfort | Advances in aviation speed, distance and altitude.