No Prize for Second PlaceThe Daily Mail's 'Great Atlantic Air Race' was wholeheartedly resuscitated after the Armistice. This challenge began in 1913, when the newspaper's proprietor, Lord Northcliffe, offered a £10,000 prize (roughly $1.15m today) for the first non-stop crossing of the Atlantic by a heavier-than-air aircraft. It would be awarded 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 first plane to cross was a Curtiss NC-4, crewed between New York State to Lisbon, which headlined here in May 2022:
https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=12930.msg250981#msg250981. Though it made history, because that crossing took 19 days, no prize was awarded. The winner would prove to be John Alcock & Arthur Brown in a converted Vickers 'Vimy' bomber on June 15. Check out forum member lone modeler's post on on that plane:
https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=6274.msg114357#msg114357.
So what of the other contestants? Notable entries included Sopwith's famous test pilot Harry Hawker who, with navigator Kenneth Mackenzie Grieve, made the first attempt nearly a month earlier... but ditched their single-engine Sopwith 'Atlantic' in the ocean after its Rolls Royce engine overheated 1130 miles from Ireland. Next in line to fail were Majors F.P. Raynham and C.W.F. Morgan in their Martinsyde 'Raynor'. Another 'also ran' was Sidney Pickles in a Fairey.
And then there was Rear Admiral Sir Mark Edward Frederic Kerr and his crew in the world's largest operational airplane (another converted bomber)- the Handley Page V/1500. Today's article notes the second reincarnation of this big bird after being twice robbed of its intended duties. With a custom-built runway at Harbour Grace, Newfoundland, as their point of embarkation, Kerr had his V/1500 shipped from Britain by sea in over 100 crates. Their plane was reassembled and flying by early June, Kerr's team seemed able to win the prize after Hawker's failure. Alas, while awaiting parts to address cooling issues with their four Rolls Royces, Kerr's team learned of Alcock's & Brown's achievement.
What to do with a disused giant bomber when there's no prize for second place? Kerr was "
ordered to quit the transatlantic attempt, but to instead tour the aircraft in the United States. Kerr attempted to arrange his visit to New York with the arrival of the (British airship) R-34 on its east to west flight.... During the flight, Kerr exchanged wireless messages with the R-34. The team left Harbour Grace for New York on 4 July 1919. On the way to New York, the engine started to overhead (sic). There was a loud crack, the engine stopped, and as piece of metal went through the fuselage., which forced them down. In Parrshoro, Nova Scotia, they landed heavily on a small racetrack and destroyed the fuselage and damaged the tail." (via planecrashgirl.ca). They had no choice but to 'throw up the sponge'. Repairs were made and by the time of this article's publication, they did succeed in delivering the first ever air-mail parcel from Nova Scotia to the United States.
(from the Evening World, 15 October 1919):







The final fate of this machine is unknown to me though a few relics are extant. At a centennial commemoration in 2019, the navigator's seat was presented to the Ottawa House By the Sea museum in Parrsboro. For further good reading, here are two websites:
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https://conceptionbaymuseum.com/2020/07/03/the-handley-page-atlantic-at-sea-level/ -
https://planecrashgirl.ca/2019/10/31/kerr-in-harbour-grace/ -
https://www.aerosociety.com/news/the-great-transatlantic-race/