Read Charles Kingsford Smith and Those Magnificent Men Online
Authors: Peter Fitzsimons
‘Would you mind checking the engine for me,’ Smithy asked him immediately upon landing, ‘and giving the airframe a general run over?’
Frankly Harry would. He was exhausted, but as Smithy was, after all, his boss and a fine fellow he reluctantly agreed.
48
Which was just as well, because in no time at all, Purvis was horrified to note a dozen serious cracks around the cowling of the new plane, the conical metal cover that was effectively a bonnet around the aeroplane’s extra powerful engine that Smithy had had specially fitted, perhaps producing stronger vibrations than the cowling was designed for. All the cracks stemmed from the rivet holes.
Cloncurry was without the means to have the plane repaired, so Smithy and Taylor had no choice but to return to their starting point. Frustrated beyond measure, Smithy nursed the plane back to Sydney and immediately employed that city’s foremost engineering firm, Holder and Stroud, to try to repair it.
When, in fact, it proved beyond repair, the company set about spinning a new cowling from scratch. There was endless to-ing and fro-ing, putting extra people on and working in late shifts, but when all was said and done, it took—as 30 September, 1 October, 2 October, 4 October dribbled by—too long to make the trip feasible.
By now, to get to Mildenhall by the deadline and be in shape to race back he would have to break the Australia to England record just to reach the starting line, supervise a four-day overhaul of the Altair prior to the race start, obtain final clearances, rehearse and organise his ground crews, and procure petrol and oil supplies.
49
No matter which way Smithy cut it, and he cut it every which way, there was just
no
way he would be able to get to England in time for the race either in the
Lady Southern Cross
or an alternative plane from America and then get both himself and the plane in shape to win the race. Finally, he was left with no option, and on the morning of 4 October 1934 he was obliged, with a very heavy heart, to cable the race organisers:
Deeply regret on account of delays and the difficulties of completing the job, that I am unable to participate in the Centenary Air Race. Please accept this as formal withdrawal, coupled with sincerest best wishes for the winner and the safe carrying out of the most spectacular air race in the history of aviation.
C. Kingsford Smith
50
The criticism began. Coward! Cur! Sell-out! Obviously he was pulling out of the race because he was chicken, because he knew his American plane would be beaten by the good ol’ British planes.
They had a cracked cowling did they, and so couldn’t fly? Diddums. Good thing all the people in the country with cracks in their car and truck bonnets didn’t take the same approach, wasn’t it? Or the country would dinkum grind to a halt, wouldn’t it? Huh?
Huh?
HUH?
He began to receive vicious letters, one even accompanied by a white feather. When the first lot arrived at his office at Mascot, Smithy’s face turned ashen with shock.
51
As Smithy noted one more time, ‘A nation’s hero may become a nation’s whipping boy overnight.’
In the middle of the maelstrom, Smithy was particularly pleased to receive a cable from Charles Ulm, then in America: Tell Kingsford Smith, I will obtain a suitable plane in U.S.A. and fly it to London for him.
52
It was a singularly kind offer from his old mate, whatever their differences had been, but after looking at it closely Smithy had to decline. Time, which he had so often trounced in his many record-breaking flights, had now defeated him.
Well, the hell with the lot of them. On the afternoon of 5 October, Smithy and Bill Taylor were in Smithy’s office at Mascot, both of them feeling lower than a snake’s bellybutton when Smithy opened the
Times Atlas
to page 102, laid it before Bill, and looked at him meaningfully. It was a map of the Pacific Ocean.
53
They would bloody well fly
that
, is what they would do, and be the first to fly it from west to east. Bill nodded his head, and it was done. They would fly the
Lady Southern Cross
, and Smithy would sell it on arrival to retrieve the money provided by his backers.
This announcement in no way quelled the many attacks on him, and on 13 October 1934, Smithy made a personal reply in a front-page diatribe he penned for—of all papers (given how bitterly it had attacked him during the Coffee Royal affair)—
Smith’s Weekly
, aimed squarely at his critics. Entitled ‘HIS CARDS ON THE TABLE’, and emblazoned across the top of the front page, Smithy got straight to the point: ‘I’ve done some foolish things in connection with the big air race. I admit them. But I’m no squib. I know there are people who say I am. I know there are others who contend that I’m pleased to be out of the race; and others again say I’m wholly and solely to blame for being out…And about this “squibbing” business. Have a look at the map, you “squib” critics! See whether an England-Australia flight—looks, I say—any worse than a flight across the Pacific…
‘Well, I’m putting my cards on the table—I’m saying my piece. I’m out of the race. That’s a punch in the solar plexus. But, worse is that squib talk. That’s hitting below the belt. Anyway, I’d like anyone who says I’m a squib to say so in my hearing. And don’t get the idea I’m thinking of legal action.’
54
Even then, Kingsford Smith was barely clearing his throat, as over the next two thousand words or so, he acknowledged all his mistakes, even as he took aim and shot down the bulk of other charges made against him. He explained the reasons behind choosing an American plane, and noted that many of his critics probably drove American cars, so where the hell did
they
get off?
The damaged cowling? Glad they mentioned it: ‘I know there are critics who assert that a small matter like cracks in the cowling would never have held me up if I didn’t want to be held up. I know they’ve been saying that cracks in the bonnet would not hold up a car. Maybe not. If a bit of bonnet comes adrift, it would not sheer away a rear wheel. But if a bit of cowling breaks off—as it certainly threatened to do so on the Altair – it would be immediately whisked into the slipstream and bashed against the tail. If you’ve got any imagination you may be able to figure out what a piece of metal travelling at anything up to 280 miles per hour could do to a vital part of a plane. I may be a mug, but there are limits to the risks I take…‘
55
It was a bravura performance from Kingsford Smith, a bit of elegant writing mixed with closed-fist thwacks at his most trenchant critics, and acidic little pats on the heads for those who thought they were critics but simply didn’t understand—well, now he hoped they did. He finished: ‘It is primarily because of my backers that I am tackling the Pacific flight. They are going to be paid. If I pull this off there will be money for them and for me; and I’ll certainly be able to sell the Altair in America. Anyway, I’ve put my cards on the table. I did my best, but the fates were against me. I’m sorry.’
56
Bravo! Bravo!
Encore! Encore!
Almost on the instant, the public mood towards Kingsford Smith changed, so powerful a case had he made. Because, apart from being a superman, it was now obvious he was just like them. He had made mistakes, and was man enough to acknowledge them, and apologise to those people he had let down. From delivering letters accusing him of cowardice, the postman was for the next week getting a hernia carrying fan-mail to him, as the public poured out their belief in him, and their outrage at his critics.
57
Now all he needed to do was to become the first man across the Pacific flying eastwards, and make the flight a success.
Throughout his life, Smithy was completely uninterested in business matters. Flying came first. If business considerations made the advancement of flying difficult, then it was always Smithy’s contention that business methods should be altered to fit the circumstances…
J
OHN
S
TANNAGE
,
ONE OF
K
INGSFORD
S
MITH’S GREAT FRIENDS
,
COLLEAGUES AND EARLY BIOGRAPHERS
1
A
t three o’clock on the foggy Saturday morning of 20 October 1934, the gigantic steel doors of the hangars at the brand-new Royal Air Force base at Mildenhall in Suffolk, 62 miles north-east of London, were slowly opened, as young RAF cadets hauled on the chains. Within minutes, no fewer than twenty sleek, resplendent aeroplanes were wheeled outside, and in short order had their motors purring as shadowy mechanics, pilots, press, officials and even beautiful women in evening dresses flitted around on the flood-lit field. The greatest air race the world had ever seen was just hours away from beginning. Mildenhall to Melbourne, 11,000 miles, with a £10,000 prize to the winner!
2
Particular among those planes were the three purpose-built de Havilland DH.88 Comets with variable pitch propellers that Smithy had long before identified as the main contenders for the prize. One of those Comets,
Black Magic
, was to be piloted by Jim Mollison and his wife Amy Johnson. Another Comet,
Grosvenor House
, was flown by the burly Flight Lieutenant Charles Scott with the dapper chappie Captain Tom Campbell Black as his co-pilot.
The two biggest planes in the gathering were a couple of passenger liners, entered to demonstrate the feasibility of around-the-world travel in comfort, and speed.
3
One was a Boeing 247-D piloted by a former lion-tamer from Mississippi, Roscoe Turner, famous for always wearing a gaudy gold-and-crimson flying helmet, whipcord breeches, Sam Browne belt, blue tunic and black riding boots—and flying most places with his pet lion cub, who answered to the name of ‘Gilmore’. He even had a stick made of a lion’s tail, and a coat made of the lion that had been attached to it!
4
Of him it had been written in
Aero Digest
: ‘A pilot with nerve enough to wear that uniform and kick a half-grown lion in the pants is bound to come in first eventually.’
5
(Turner was also the talk of the town for his delightful, if daring, informality when he had been introduced to King George V when His Majesty and Queen Mary had visited all the flyers the day before. His Majesty had offered his hand, and Roscoe had taken it, saying simply, ‘Hallo, King.’
6
)
The other big aircraft was a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Douglas DC-2 all-metal monoplane called
Uiver
—‘stork’ in Dutch—with Captain Koene Dirk Parmentier in command and Captain Jan Johannes Moll as co-pilot, and it was flying with two further crew members, three paying passengers and a full load of post, weighing over 400 pounds! A feature of this plane, along with the Orions, the Boeing, the Comets and several other entrants, was its amazing retractable undercarriage which, at the heave of a lever, allowed the wheels to be tucked up into the bottom of the engine housings, reducing drag by a significant degree. It was the
coming thing
in aeroplane efficiency.
As dawn approached the planes were lined up on the airstrip, and all was in readiness, including no fewer than 60,000 spectators—among whom were many lords and ladies and a gaily attired Anthony Fokker—and 700 members of the press. On the stroke of 6.30 am, Sir Alfred Bower, the Acting Lord Mayor of London, gave the starting signal by dropping his flag—a small Union Jack—beside Jim and Amy Mollison’s
Black Magic
, and they were the first to take to the skies. Exactly two minutes later his flag dropped again, and they were followed by Roscoe Turner in his Boeing 247-D airliner and, in quick succession, the others, as the sun began its own climb into the sky in admiration. Just a short time before seven o’clock, they were all on their way.
As Sir Macpherson Robertson enthusiastically told the listening audience of ABC Melbourne, ‘Never in the history of aviation has there been such a line up of aviators and never in the history of the world has there been such an aerial contest.’
7
And certainly never such international interest in a race of any nature, as newspaper accounts around the world gave breathless updates.
On the next day in Australia, Charles Kingsford Smith and Bill Taylor were getting ready to make their own enormous trip. In the old days, when he had been younger and fresher, Smithy had approached each pioneering flight with a mixture of overwhelming enthusiasm and energy. But things had changed. Now he was thirty-seven years old, vastly experienced but also more than a little exhausted, and much of his energy and enthusiasm had dissipated to be replaced by a gritted-teeth determination to do what he had to do. Of joy, there was little. Rather, as he later noted of his approach to this first leg of flying to Fiji, Kingsford Smith’s primary feeling was a strong sense of boredom that he would have to sit in the pilot’s seat for the next twenty hours.