You're currently on:

More Views

  • Smith and Bronte Landing  Molokai
  • Smith and Bronte Landing  Molokai
  • Smith and Bronte Landing  Molokai

Smith and Bronte Landing Molokai

Email to a Friend

Be the first to review this product

$0.00

Quick Overview

A small wooden sign marks the site where Ernest Smith and Emory Bronte safely crashed their airplane after making the first civilian trans-Pacific flight on July 15, 1927....

* Required Fields

$0.00
Add Items to Itinerary

Detailed Description

Highway 450

A small wooden sign marks the site where Ernest Smith and Emory Bronte safely crashed their airplane after making the first civilian trans-Pacific flight on July 15, 1927. Their final destination was Honolulu, but the plane was almost out of fuel so they stall-landed in a kiawe thicket 100 miles short of their goal. Smith was a airmail pilot and Bronte was his navigator. They took off from Oakland field in a 27-foot long monoplane called City of Oakland. The flight took 26 hours and 36 minutes and they crossed 2,200 miles of ocean.

Directions:
Located on the ocean side of Highway 450 just before mile marker #12.



Tags

Add Your Tags:
Use spaces to separate tags. Use single quotes (') for phrases.