First Non-Stop Non-Refueled Flight Around the Globe 

US #C44 was issued for the 75th anniversary of the Universal Postal Union.

On December 23, 1986, Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager completed the first non-stop flight around the world without refueling.

As far back as the 1500s, daring explorers have sought to circumnavigate the globe.  In the 1520s, a crew of 18 was the first to circle the globe by sea in a single expedition.  The journey took a little over three years.

Marshall Islands #754a-d pictures four US submarines.

Over the years, there would come many more significant trips around the globe.  Spanish explorer Martín Ignacio de Loyola was the first to circumnavigate the world twice.  Then in the 1760s, the first woman to circle the globe, Jeanne Baret, did so disguised as a man.  In the 1780s, Robert Gray was the first American to circumnavigate the globe.  1909 saw the first fleet complete the journey, Teddy Roosevelt’s Great White Fleet.  The USS Triton completed the first underwater circumnavigation in 1960.

US #C13 pictures the Graf Zeppelin over the Atlantic.

After centuries of accomplishments at sea, the first circumnavigation by plane came in 1924.  The US Army Air Service flew 27,560 miles in 175 days, making 57 stops along the way.  In 1929, the Graf Zeppelin set a record for the fastest trip around the globe at 21 days.

US #C95-96 was issued for Wiley Post’s 81st birthday.

Wiley Post, who made the journey in 8 days, 15 hours, and 51 minutes, bested this feat two years later.  Post broke his own record in 1933, completing the journey in 7 days, and by himself, without the aid of a navigator.  In 1949, a US Air Force B-50 Superfortress made the first non-stop flight in 94 hours, with four in-air refuelings.

Up until 1986, all trips around the globe had required refueling – either by landing or receiving it in-air from another aircraft.  Then in 1981, three friends developed an idea for a new plane that could make the trip without any stops or refueling.  While at lunch one day, brothers Dick and Burt Rutan and Jeana Yeager sketched out the plans for a unique plane.

Dubbed the Voyager, the plane would be made of a lightweight composite material, which was mostly graphite, Kevlar, and fiberglass.  The plane itself weighed just 939 pounds but could carry over 7,000 pounds of fuel in its 17 fuel tanks.  The three built the plane through private funding over the next five years.

After making the necessary test flights, the Voyager took off from Edwards Air Force Base in California at 8:00 am on December 14, 1986, in front of 3,500 press spectators. Although the wing tips scraped the runway as the plane accelerated before takeoff, it was decided the plane was still safe to fly and the journey proceeded.  Inside the plane was quite tight and they had planned to switch off every three hours, but that ended up being hard to maintain.  Rutan and Yeager had to fly for longer periods at a time and carefully make their way around bad weather, including Typhoon Marge.

US #C12 pictures a pilot’s wing insignia and the globe in honor of their bravery and spirit of adventure.

Nine days after leaving Edwards, the plane returned at 8:06 am, successfully completing the first non-stop non-refueled circumnavigation of the globe.  Yeager and the Rutans received the Collier Trophy for their accomplishment and the Voyager is now on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC.

Only one other plane as accomplished this feat since.  It was also designed by Burt Rutan and was piloted by Steve Fossett.  In 2006, that plane set a new world record for the fastest non-stop non-refuted circumnavigation of the globe – just 2 days, 19 hours traveling at a speed of 342 miles per hour. 

US #4740 – The first Global Forever stamp.

Click here to view photos of the Voyager.

You asked, and we listened…  FREE printable This Day in History album pages are now available!

Click here to download a PDF of today’s article.  

It’s two pages.  The first page has a border so you can print it on whatever paper you want.  The second page doesn’t have a border so you can print it on Mystic’s blank supplement pages.  

And click here if you need a binder, or other supplies to create your This Day in History album.  You’ll find handy mount grab bags, or you can get the mounts you need on each individual US stamp page.  

Let us know if you like these pages and want us to keep creating them.  

And remember – you can purchase any of the stamps, covers, or coins in these articles.  Just click on the pictures and add them to your cart.

Click here to see what else happened on This Day in History.

Did you like this article? Click here to rate:
Share this Article

2 Comments

  1. Great article today. Thank you.
    Like some interesting reading ??
    Steve Fosset
    Peter Ortiz
    Interesting biographies indeed

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *