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General information | |
Type | Boeing 314 |
Owners | Pan American World Airways 1939-1942 American government 1942-1946 Universal Airlines 1946-1947 American International Airways 1947-1948 World Airways 1948-1951 |
Registration | NC18605 |
Serial | 48225 |
History | |
Manufactured | 1938-1939 |
First flight | 1939 |
In service | 1939 to 1946 |
Fate | Retired - scrapped |
The Dixie Clipper (civil registration NC18605) was an American Boeing 314 Clipper flying boat, best known for in June 1939 beginning the first scheduled air service between America and Europe, the first American aircraft to carry passengers and a cargo of mail across the South Atlantic and the first all-metal air transport to fly 3,120 miles non-stop.[1] Between 14 January and 30 January 1943 it flew American president Franklin D. Roosevelt most of the way to and from the Casablanca Conference. In doing so it set a number of firsts with Roosevelt the first president to fly while in office, the first to fly across an ocean, the first to visit three continents by air and the first to cross the equator four times.[2]
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