Talking Transportation 2024
First Transcontinental Flight Took 50 Hours in 1929, Piloted by Charles Lindbergh
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Aviation history was made July 7, 1929, when the first transcontinental flight from New York to Los Angeles, took off, not with an airplane, but on a train. This was the real birth of commercial aviation in the U.S., and it was led by none other than Charles Lindbergh, just two years after his solo crossing of the Atlantic. The journey from New York began with an overnight Pullman train. Christened by Amelia Earhart “The Airway Limited,“ it arrived the next morning at Port Columbus, Ohio at a purpose-built train station and airport. There the passengers boarded a Ford Trimotor and flew west, stopping to refuel in St.















