Connemara celebrates historic flight

SOME NINE decades after John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown flew across the Atlantic and landed in a Connemara bog, their historic…

SOME NINE decades after John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown flew across the Atlantic and landed in a Connemara bog, their historic non-stop flight was celebrated with an air show in Clifden, Co Galway, at the weekend.

The world’s only “formation” wing walking team, a jet display and a visit by a replica of the Vimy Vickers model used by Alcock and Brown were among highlights of the event, hosted by Connemara Chamber of Commerce.

“Today we take transatlantic travel for granted, but in 1919, these men undertook a dangerous, life-threatening trip which in time opened the skies for us all,” the chamber said in a statement.

“Imagine for a moment the hub of activity that was Connemara 90 years ago when these two men literally dropped from the sky into the bog, and were able to send a message from Marconi’s wireless radio station to inform London they had made it across the Atlantic – thus assuring themselves their rightful place in history,” said the chamber of commerce statement.

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An Alcock and Brown exhibition, by Connemara historian Kathleen Villiers-Tuthill, and a ground display by the Defence Forces was also part of the programme.

The Vimy Vickers replica was flown from the Brooklands Museum in Surrey, England, to Connnemara by John Dodd and Clive Edwards, landing at Galway Airport before flying west to Clifden.

Lorna Siggins

Lorna Siggins

Lorna Siggins is the former western and marine correspondent of The Irish Times