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EXPLORATIONS - April 10, 2002:
Wiley Post
By Paul Thompson
Now the VOA Special English program, explorations.
Today Shirley Griffith and Doug Johnson tell about pilot Wiley Post.
He set new records when he flew his own airplane around the world in
nineteen-thirty-three.
((Theme))
VOICE 1:
It was nineteen-thirty-three. Only six years
earlier Charles Lindburgh became famous around the world as the first
person to fly alone across the Atlantic Ocean. Now, a young pilot was
trying to fly across Russia.
He had left Moscow several hours before. All
he heard was the sound of the one engine that powered his plane. Hour
after hour the same sound. Now the weather was bad. He could not see
much ahead, only the fog.
Flying in fog is very dangerous. Yet the sound
of the engine made everything seem warm and safe. Then, out of the fog
he saw a mountain. He had only seconds to bring the airplane up.
It was a narrow escape, one of many he would
have during his long flight.
VOICE 2:
The young pilot was Wiley Post. He was trying
to fly around the world by himself. He made the trip in less than eight
days. He stopped eleven times for fuel, food and a little sleep.
Wiley Post made his famous flight in July, nineteen-thirty-three.
Not many flight instruments existed that could help him find his way.
He was alone, fighting against sleep. If he fell asleep he would die.
((Music Bridge))
VOICE 1:
Nothing in Wiley Post's early years suggests
that he would become a famous pilot. He was born in Grand Saline, Texas,
in eighteen-ninety-eight. His family were farmers.
In nineteen-thirteen, Wiley saw something that
forever changed his life -- an airplane. After watching the plane fly,
young Wiley waited until most people had left the area. He then began
inspecting and studying the plane. He measured different parts of the
plane with his hands. Many years later, Wiley Post would say that first
airplane was the most wonderful thing he had ever seen.
VOICE 2:
Wiley Post began to study everything he could
find about flying. He began to educate himself about subjects such as
mathematics, radio and machinery. His self-education would continue
the rest of his life.
Post finally rode in an airplane in nineteen-nineteen.
At the time, many people believed all pilots were special people. They
believed it took special skills and courage to fly an airplane. But
after his first ride, Wiley Post knew that flying was something he could
learn to do.
VOICE 1:
Wiley Post began his career in flying, not as
a pilot, but as a performer who jumps from airplanes using a parachute.
He did this with a group that performed flying tricks to earn money.
He jumped ninety-nine times in two years with the flying show. When
he was not jumping with a parachute, he was being taught how to fly
by pilots in the air show. But he could not fly as often as he liked.
VOICE 2:
Wiley Post then decided the only way to become
a good pilot was to buy an airplane of his own. He needed more money
than he earned in the flying show. He went to work in the oil-producing
areas of Texas. But he damaged his left eye in an accident. Doctors
had to remove his eye.
At first, Post thought his days as a pilot were
ended. A pilot needs to be able to judge distance. Judging distance
is difficult without two eyes. It seems impossible to tell how big objects
are and how far away.
Wiley Post began teaching himself to judge distance
with only one eye. He worked hard at training his eye and brain to tell
the correct distance. It took a long time, but he succeeded. He continued
to fly and soon became a very good pilot.
VOICE 1:
In nineteen-twenty-eight, he got a job flying
the plane that belonged to a rich oil producer from Oklahoma. The man's
name was F.C. Hall. He bought a new airplane for Post to fly. Mister
Hall named the airplane the "Winnie Mae" after one of his
daughters.
F.C. Hall told Post he could use the plane to
enter flight competitions. Post did. In nineteen-thirty, he entered
the national air races. The race called for flying without stopping
from Los Angeles in the western state of California, to the city of
Chicago, in the middle western state of Illinois.
Post won the race. He defeated several well
known pilots. It was the first time the public heard the name Wiley
Post.
VOICE 2:
Post was not really interested in racing airplanes.
He wanted to be the first person to fly around the world. Many pilots
had talked about trying to made such a flight. But no one had done it.
Post believed he would need someone to help
him in the effort. He chose an Australian man, Harold Gatty, to do the
mathematics that decided the plane's direction. Post would fly the plane.
On June twenty-third, nineteen-thirty-one, Post and Gatty took off from
Roosevelt Field in New York. They returned to Roosevelt Field eight
days, fifteen hours and fifty-one minutes later. They had flown around
the world.
VOICE 1:
At first every one was very happy. Wiley Post
and Harold Gatty were heroes. Then many people began to say that Post
was nothing more than an airplane driver because he had no real education.
They said Gatty was the real hero. He had guided the flight. Both men
knew they had made the flight as a team. Others did not recognize this.
This hurt Post.
Wiley Post began to plan another flight around
the world. This time he would go alone.
((Music Bridge))
VOICE 2:
Wiley Post knew that any effort has a good chance
of success if the person planning the task is well prepared. So he worked
hard to prepare well. He used the most modern equipment possible. He
made sure the engine on the Winnie Mae was perfect. And to prepare himself,
he went without sleep for long periods of time.
On July fifteenth, nineteen-thirty-three, Post
took off from Floyd Bennett Field in New York. His first stop would
be Berlin, Germany. He landed in Berlin twenty-six hours later. He became
the first person to fly from New York to Berlin without stopping.
VOICE 1:
After a little food for himself and fuel for
the Winnie Mae, Post was once again in the air. This time he was headed
for Russia. For long hours he flew, listening only to the sound of his
engine. Often, the weather was so bad he could not see where he was.
At one point he came so close to running out of gas he considered using
his parachute. But at the last minute he found a place to land and get
gas.
The flight across the huge width of Russia was
difficult. He made several stops for gas and a few hours rest before
flying across the Bering Sea to Alaska.
VOICE 2:
By now, he was very tired. To keep himself awake
as he flew east during the long night, Post tied a piece of string to
one finger. The other end of the string was tied to a heavy aircraft
tool. He held the tool in his hand. If he started to fall asleep, the
tool would fall from his hand. The string would pull his finger and
wake him.
From Fairbanks, Alaska, he flew to Edmonton,
Canada, and then on toward New York.
More than fifty-thousand people waited at Floyd
Bennett Field. Wiley Post gently landed the Winnie Mae long after dark.
He had flown around the world in seven days, eighteen-hours and forty-nine
minutes.
Thousands of excited people rushed toward the
plane. Wiley Post was a hero. He had become the most famous pilot in
America.
((Music Bridge))
VOICE 1:
In nineteen-thirty-five, only two years after
his around the world record flight, Wiley Post was killed in a flying
accident in Alaska.
Before Post's death, the government of the United
States had bought the Winnie Mae. It is owned by the Smithsonian's Air
and Space Museum in Washington, D-C.
VOICE 2:
Many pilots have flown around the world since
Wiley Post made his flight. His record was first broken only a few years
after his death. Since that time many records for the trip have been
made and broken.
Yet what Wiley Post did can never really be
done again. No pilot today would try to make the flight in an airplane
like the Winnie Mae. No one would try it with the flight instruments
he used. And, no on would want to copy his flight around the world ...
alone.
((Theme))
VOICE 1:
This Special English program was written by
Paul Thompson. This is Shirley Griffith.
VOICE 2:
And this is Doug Johnson. Join us again next
week for another explorations program on the Voice of America.
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