Voyager
The double sunrise
9th March 2022

On 12th November 1919, Sir Ross Macpherson Smith and his brother Sir Keith Macpherson Smith along with their crew Sergeant W.H 'Wally' Shiers and Sergeant J.M 'Jim' Bennett got into their Vickers Vimy and set off to make history in what would become known as The Great Air Race, as they would become the first pilots to fly from the United Kingdom and Australia, receiving a knighthood for their remarkable achievement by His Majesty King George V.
The aircraft in question was a converted Vickers Vimy bomber registered G-EAOU to which it was dubbed to mean by the crew rather wittingly as 'God 'elp all of us'. The Vimy departed at 08:30 from Hounslow Heath and flew via Lyon, Rome, Cairo, Damascus, Basra, Karachi, Delhi, Calcutta, Akyab, Rangoon racecourse, Singora, Singapore, Batavia and Surabaya enduring tremendous hardship and adversity including the need to construct a temporary airstrip out of bamboo mats to become unstuck in Surabaya.
The crew reached Darwin in Australia at 16:10 on 10th December 1919 racking up a distance of over 11,000 miles and flight time of 136 hours in total. They were awarded prize money of £10,000 - worth £6.5 million in 1919. The same Vickers Vimy is now on display At Adelaide Airport.

Written by Jacque (0002)