Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide
  • Home
  • /
  • Aerospace
  • /
  • Alcock and Brown sculpture goes to Ireland for first non-stop transatlantic flight centenary

Aerospace Events

Alcock and Brown sculpture goes to Ireland for first non-stop transatlantic flight centenary

The celebrated Alcock and Brown sculpture was moved from its home at the Heathrow Academy to Clifden in Co. Galway on Tuesday 7th May 2019 to mark the centenary of the first non-stop transatlantic flight from North America to Europe.


   
Above: (left to right) Brian Hughes, Manager of Abbeyglen Hotel, Co. Galway, Nigel Milton, Director of Communications Heathrow Airport, Adrian O’ Neill, Ambassador of Ireland to United Kingdom and Des Burke, Tourism Ireland.

The limestone statue was commissioned by the British Government and designed and sculpted by artist William McMillen. It was unveiled at Heathrow in 1954.  The statue features the pilots dressed in aviator clothes, including caps and goggles.

Advertisement
ODU RT

The statue weights 1 tonne and is 11-foot-high and almost 4 foot wide. A transportation casket has been specially commissioned to safely transport the statue to Ireland.

The Ambassador of Ireland to the United Kingdom, Adrian O’Neill visited Heathrow Academy on Tuesday 7th May at 9am to wish the statue safe passage to Ireland. The statue will be exhibited at Abbeyglen Castle Hotel in Clifden, Co. Galway for the next eight weeks in the run up to the centenary anniversary which falls on 15th June 2019.

In April 1913 the Daily Mail offered a prize of £10,000 to “the aviator who shall first cross the Atlantic in an aeroplane in flight from any point in the United States of America, Canada or Newfoundland to any point in Great Britain or Ireland in 72 continuous hours.” The competition was suspended with the outbreak of war in 1914 but reopened after Armistice was declared in 1918.

John Alcock and Arthur Brown departed from Newfoundland, Canada on 14th June 1919 in a modified First World War Vickers Vimy and flew across the North Atlantic Ocean in just 15 hours 57 minutes, crash-landing in Derrygimlagh Bog, near the site of the famous Marconi radio station in Connemara.

The Daily Mail had journalists all along the coast of Ireland and France waiting on the flight to land but managed to get beaten by a local Galway journalist.

The celebrations set to continue – Alcock & Brown 100, festival honouring aviation heroes

Advertisement
ODU RT

A commemorative festival, running from 11th - 16th June 2019 in Clifden, has a fantastic line-up to celebrate the aviation heroes. Events will include a live re-enactment of the 1919 landing in Derrigimlagh, bringing the historic episode to life.

The premiere of an Alcock & Brown documentary, featuring the nearest surviving relative to Captain Alcock, Tony Alcock MBE, will be screened during the festival. The Alcock & Brown artefacts exhibition is running throughout the festival, and will offer visitors a fantastic opportunity to see pieces of the plane still in existence. 

Tony Alcock, nephew of John Alcock said: “In this Centenary year, it seems very appropriate to move the statue to Clifden, particularly as this town was part of the Transatlantic story. Moreover, many of the Clifden residents have relatives who met Alcock and Brown on 15 June 1919 and the flight is very much part of the Town's history. I look forward to seeing the statue in its new mounting place when I participate in the Centenary Celebrations at Clifden in June."

Local historians and archaeologists will give guided tours of the area. Literary figures such as such as Tony Curtis, Brendan Lynch and others will host poetry readings and discussions, while a series of seminars will explore the Alcock & Brown story and diverse aspects of the flight. 

Waterford Crystal are launching a limited-edition miniature replica of the Vickers Vimy biplane to commemorate the centenary. Modelled on the original details of the plane, it is made up of 51 individually hand-crafted pieces and took over 160 hours to complete.

The statue and replica plane will be unveiled at a Champagne reception in The Abbeyglen Castle Hotel on Wednesday 15th May 2019 at 6.30pm.


 

Advertisement
L3Harris L3Harris
EasyJet in drive to recruit 1,000 new pilots

Aerospace

EasyJet in drive to recruit 1,000 new pilots

26 April 2024

Earlier this week easyJet opened its renowned Generation easyJet Pilot Training programme, which takes aspiring pilots with little or no experience to the cockpit of an Airbus A320 commercial airliner in around two years as qualified co-pilot.

NATS tops list of Europe

Aerospace

NATS tops list of Europe's Climate Leaders

26 April 2024

NATS has been awarded first place in the European Climate Leaders list, a survey of two thousand companies across Europe.

Cranfield commits to sustainable research practices

Aerospace

Cranfield commits to sustainable research practices

26 April 2024

Committing to reduce the environmental impacts of its research activities, Cranfield University has joined organisations in the UK research and innovation sector as a founding signatory to a new agreement on research and innovation practices.

Artemis Aerospace adds hub in Singapore

Aerospace

Artemis Aerospace adds hub in Singapore

26 April 2024

West Sussex based Artemis Aerospace has announced the addition of a hub in Singapore following the launch of two similar sites in the US earlier this year.

Advertisement
ODU RT
Jet Zero Council advance hydrogen aviation discussions at Cranfield

Aerospace Events

Jet Zero Council advance hydrogen aviation discussions at Cranfield

26 April 2024

The Jet Zero Council met at Cranfield University last week to discuss steps towards sustainable aviation with a special focus on hydrogen.

Most dangerous electronic items passengers take on planes revealed

Aerospace Security

Most dangerous electronic items passengers take on planes revealed

26 April 2024

The number of lithium battery fires on planes continues to rise but the personal electronic items which cause the most problems can now be revealed.

Advertisement
ODU RT