Medal Commemorating Amelia Earhart, the First Woman to Cross over the Atlantic Ocean by Airplane, 1928

THF256008 / Medal Commemorating Amelia Earhart, the First Woman to Cross over the Atlantic Ocean by Airplane, 1928 / 0
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Artifact Overview

Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly the Atlantic Ocean on June 17-18, 1928. She did not pilot the plane but rode as a passenger with pilot Wilmer Stultz and mechanic Louis Gordon. The trio flew in a Fokker F.VII Tri-Motor named Friendship. Four years later, Earhart crossed the Atlantic again -- this time as pilot on a solo flight.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Medal

Date Made

1928-1936

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

36.381.3

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Metal

Dimensions

Height: 0.063 in
Diameter: 1.25 in

Inscriptions

on front: THE FIRST WOMAN TO CROSS THE ATLANTIC BY AIRPLANE - AMELIA EARHART on back: NEWFOUNDLAND JUNE 17 - SOUTH WALES JUNE 18 - 1928 in center of back: SEAPLANE / FRIENDSHIP / WHITEHEAD - [?]
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    Amelia Earhart, famous for the 1928 flight that made her the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, helped inaugurate transcontinental airline service in 1929. She posed with a Ford Tri-Motor in New York City's Pennsylvania Station. This early service had passengers traveling by train at night and by airplane during daylight. Total travel time to California was 51 hours.