The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Fly from coasttocoa­st in 48 hours for $5,200

- Jim Cameron

How does this sound: Fly coasttocoa­st in just 48 hours for only $5,200?

That was the pitch for the first commercial, transcon air service in 1929 operated by TAT, Transconti­nental Air Transport, much later to become TWA. Founded by aviation pioneer Clement Melville Keys, the firm worked with Charles Lindbergh to also secure lucrative mail contracts. But these flights were a first for passengers.

TAT was mocked as “take a train” because their service combined rail and air service to make it from New York to Los Angeles.

Passengers first boarded an overnight train at 6:05 p.m. from New York’s Penn Station, “the Airways Special.” This first leg of the journey was to avoid flying over the Allegheny Mountains, known to air mail pilots as “Hell’s Stretch” due to the winds.

After an overnight journey in their luxury Pullman cars, the train arrived at a special rail station at Port Columbus, Ohio’s airport, where they boarded a Ford TriMotor. The small plane had a pilot, copilot, steward (always a man) and seated eight or nine passengers. The plane flew at 2,500 feet at about 100 mph —

straight through the clouds and rainstorms.

After two hours in flight, the plane made its first (of many) refueling stops in Indianapol­is. Sandwiches were brought on board for the next hop, three hours away, in Kansas City. Then Wichita and finally Waynoka, Okla. The passengers there boarded a special TAT bus and were taken to the train station for their second overnight rail journey. But first came dinner at a purposebui­lt Harvey House restaurant.

By morning, the train arrived in Clovis N.M., where the passengers were again bused to the nearest airport, Portair N.M., where they had breakfast before boarding another plane to continue on to Albuquerqu­e, Winslow and Kingman Ariz. Over the western mountain ranges, the TriMotor sometimes climbed as high as 8,000 feet.

Since the cabin was not pressurize­d, there was a lot of earpopping and teeth chattering as a small onboard heater kept the cabin at no better than about 60 degrees. To treat air sickness caused by the turbulence, stewards passed out slices of lemon.

Finally, at about 6 pm Pacific Time, more than 48 hours after leaving New York, these aviation pioneers arrived in Los Angeles. The oneway fare was $352 (equal to $5,200 in today’s dollars), and that was for the cheapest Pullman train accommodat­ion, a lower berth.

Direct train service coasttocoa­st in 1930 took three days, so the time savings by air was hard to justify when TAT tickets cost 50 percent more than luxurious Pullmans by rail.

In its first 18 months in operation, the TAT transcons lost $2.7 million ($41 million in 2019 dollars). It didn’t help that, to maintain the prestige of flying TAT, each passenger was given a solid gold fountain pen from Tiffany’s.

Then came the stock market crash of 1929. And on Sept. 3, 1929, a literal crash, as a TAT plane collided with a New Mexico mountain killing all eight on board. This was the first fatal crash of a commercial airplane, but just the first of three serious accidents in the next five months for TAT.

You can now fly nonstop from New York to Los Angeles in six hours for less than $200 oneway. You’ll cruise in comfort in a pressurize­d cabin at 35,000 feet, watch a movie and surf the web — and you might even get a meal.

 ?? James Neal / Associated Press ?? Sandie Olson, president of the Waynoka Historical Society, stands in front of a lifesize photo of Charles Lindbergh in the Waynoka Air Rail Museum on July 16, while reviewing informatio­n about the Transconti­nental Air Transport airport that was opened in July 1929 northeast of Waynoka, Okla.
James Neal / Associated Press Sandie Olson, president of the Waynoka Historical Society, stands in front of a lifesize photo of Charles Lindbergh in the Waynoka Air Rail Museum on July 16, while reviewing informatio­n about the Transconti­nental Air Transport airport that was opened in July 1929 northeast of Waynoka, Okla.
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 ?? James Neal / Associated Press ?? A Ford Trimotor can be seen in the Transconti­nental Air Transport hangar northeast of Waynoka, Okla., which opened for operations on the airline's New YorktoLos Angeles airrail route in July 1929.
James Neal / Associated Press A Ford Trimotor can be seen in the Transconti­nental Air Transport hangar northeast of Waynoka, Okla., which opened for operations on the airline's New YorktoLos Angeles airrail route in July 1929.

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