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Taking off from Sabishiro Beach, Japan, aviators Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon II flew 4,558 miles in 41 hours and 34 minutes, landing at Fancher Field on October 5, 1931. The flight was made in a small, single-engine plane--a Bellanca "Skyrocket" they named Miss Veedol. Since retractable landing gear had yet to be invented, the landing gear was jettisoned over the ocean after take-off in order to lighten the load and decrease wind resistance. Their landing without gear was so smoothly accomplished that the only damage to the airplane was a bent propeller, which is now in the North Central Washington Museum, in Wenatchee, along with other momentos of the event. The two men were seeking a $25,000 prize offered by a Japanese newspaper, the Asahi Shimbun, to the pilots who could make the first nonstop flight from Japan to the United States.
The Pangborn-Herndon Memorial Site stands on the brow of a hill overlooking the Wenatchee Valley, the Columbia and Wenatchee rivers, and the snow-covered Cascade Mountains three miles northeast of East Wenatchee, Washington. From East Wenatchee, take Hwy. 2 to Grant Rd. east; take Eastmont Rd. north for 3 miles to the memorial. For further information about this call the Wenatchee Valley Convention & Visitors Bureau at 509-663-8551. The nearby Wenatchee Valley Museum and Cultural Center provides further information on this historical event. |
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