Pearson Field is a stopover point on the army's first round-the-world flight.
Early in 1936, Earhart started to plan a round-the-world flight.
The round-the-world flight took 46 hours and 26 minutes over 23,137 miles.
The round-the-world flight took 35 hours and 54 minutes over 23,125 miles.
The weather for a round-the-world flight is always too stormy that early in the season.
So far, no hot-air balloon design has come close to meeting the needs of a round-the-world flight.
Captain Ford, who was then 35, called his round-the-world flight "a purely routine operation."
Seattle was also the starting point for the first round-the-world flight, in 1924.
The aviators were arriving in New York after a successful round-the-world flight.
Who set the record for a round-the-world flight in July 1933?