Born: 02/16/1908
Died: 08/25/1932
Inducted: 10/13/2001
For decades the challenge of trans-Atlantic flight
inspired American aviators. In Wisconsin, that challenge was
accepted by Clyde Lee. As an Oshkosh teenager in the early 1920s, Clyde
took instruction from his cousin, Roy Larson. He barnstormed with Larson and on his own;
wing-walking, parachute jumping and performing aerobatics in a poky
Curtiss Canuck.
In 1929 he acquired a Stinson cabin plane and
talked of flying it to Europe. Three years later, talk turned to
action as he took off from the Oshkosh airport in pursuit of a cash
prize offered by an Oslo newspaper. The prize was to go to the first
airplane to fly non-stop from North America to Norway.
With just enough gas to top off his fuel
tanks, with no radios or modern navigational equipment, with an
airplane and engine that had seen many hours of use, Lee and his
co-pilot John Bochkon, left Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, on August
24, 1932, and headed east. Encountering storms, cold and fog over
the North Atlantic, they disappeared without a trace.
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