Circumnavigation world record progression
This is a list of the fastest circumnavigation , made by a person or team, excluding orbits of Earth from spacecraft .
List
People or team
Total duration (days)
Departure date
Arrival date
Notes
Reference
Juan Sebastián Elcano and crew (originally led by Ferdinand Magellan )
1082
20 September 1519
6 September 1522
[ 1]
Francis Drake and crew
1018
13 December 1577
26 September 1580
[ 1]
Thomas Cavendish and crew
781
21 July 1586
9 September 1588
[ 1]
Crew of the Eendracht (originally led by Willem Schouten and Jacob Le Maire )
748
14 June 1615
1 July 1617
[ 2]
John Byron and crew
676
2 July 1764
9 May 1766
[ 3]
George
Simpson
605
March 1841
October 1842
[ 4]
Clipper Marco Polo , Captain James "Bully" Forbes.
175
4 July 1852
26 December 1852
From Liverpool
[ 5] [ 6]
Clipper Lightning , Captain James "Bully" Forbes.
162
14 May 1854
23 October 1854
From Liverpool to Liverpool.
[ 7]
James Iredell Waddell and crew
394
8 October 1864
6 November 1865
CSS Shenandoah from London to Liverpool
[ 8]
This period is incomplete
George Francis Train
"80 days" (excluding a month in France)
1870
1870
By ships and trains, from New York City , perhaps inspiring Jules Verne
[ 9]
Nellie Bly
72
14 November 1889
25 January 1890
Multiple means of transport, inspired by Jules Verne
[ 10]
George Francis Train
67 days, 12 hours, 3 minutes
18 March 1890
24 May 1890
By ships and trains, from Tacoma, Washington
[ 9] [ 11]
George Francis Train
64 days
9 May 1891
12 July 1891
By ships and trains, from Fairhaven, Washington
[ 9]
J. Willis Sayre
54 days 9 hours and 42 minutes
1903
1903
From Seattle , via Trans-Siberian Railway.
[ 12]
Andre Jaeger-Schmidt, Henry Frederick, John Henry Mears
36
2 July 1913
6 August 1913
A combination of steamers, yachts, and trains
[ 13]
Linton Wells , Edward S. Evans
28 days 14 hours 36 minutes and 5 seconds
1926
1926
A combination of boat, airplane, and trains
[ 14] [ 15]
John Henry Mears
23 days 15 hours 21 minutes and 3 seconds
1928
1928
[ 16]
Hugo Eckener
21 days, 5 hours and 31 minutes
8 August 1929
29 August 1929
First circumnavigation in an airship, aboard LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin from Lakehurst, New Jersey
[ 17] [ 18]
Pilot Wiley Post and navigator Harold Gatty
8 days, 15 hours and 51 minutes
23 June 1931
1 July 1931
Lockheed Vega aeroplane, travelled 24,903 kilometres (15,474 miles), did not cross equator
[ 19]
Wiley Post
7 days, 19 hours, 49 minutes
15 July 1933
22 July 1933
Using an autopilot and radio direction finder , did not cross equator. From New York City
[ 19] [ 20]
Howard Hughes , navigator Thomas Thurlow, engineer Richard Stoddard, and mechanic Ed Lund
3 days, 19 hours, 17 minutes[ 21]
10 July 1938
14 July 1938
Lockheed 14 Super Electra (NX18973) New York City ; flight operations manager Albert Lodwick [ 22]
James Gallagher and crew (United States Air Force )
94 hours and 1 minute
1949
1949
B-50 Superfortress Lucky Lady II first aircraft to circle globe non-stop with four in-air refuelings , 37,743 kilometres (23,452 miles), did not cross equator and traveled no further south than the 20-degree parallel.
[ 23]
Col. James Morris[ 24] and crew (United States Air Force )
45 hours and 19 minutes
January 16, 1957
January 18, 1957
Operation Power Flite , three B-52 bombers , led by Lucky Lady III , supported by at least 76 KC-76 refueling aircraft, 39,147 kilometres (24,325 miles), no equatorial crossing
[ 25] [ 26]
David Springbett
44 hours and 6 minutes
8 January 1980
10 January 1980
Retains record for circumnavigation using only scheduled transportation.
[ 26]
Air France
32 hours 49 minutes and 3 seconds
12 October 1992
13 October 1992
Concorde FAI "Westbound Around the World" world air speed record from Lisbon , Portugal.
[ 27] [ 28] [ 29]
Michel Dupont and Claude Hetru (Air France )
31 hours 27 minutes and 49 seconds
15 August 1995
16 August 1995
Concorde with 98 passengers and crew, no equatorial crossing. "Eastbound Around the World" world air speed record from John F. Kennedy International Airport , New York.
[ 30] [ 31]
Other categories
People or team
Total duration (days)
Departure date
Arrival date
Notes
Reference
Steve Fossett
13 days, 8 hours, 33 minutes
19 June 2002
3 July 2002
Spirit of Freedom balloon, first solo aircraft to fly around the world without stopping or refueling from Northam, Western Australia
[ 32]
Steve Fossett
67 hours, 1 minute, 10 seconds
28 February 2005
3 March 2005
GlobalFlyer first solo nonstop un-refueled fixed-wing aircraft flight around the world from Salina, Kansas
[ 33] [ 34] [ 35]
Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg
5 months
9 March 2015
Five months later
Solar Impulse the first round-the-world solar flight in history.
[ 36]
United States Army Air Service , Lowell H. Smith and Leslie P. Arnold, and Erik H. Nelson and John Harding Jr.
175 calendar days, and covered 26,345 miles (42,398 km)
17 March 1924
28 September 1924
First aerial circumnavigation 363 flying hours 7 minutes; two aircraft of four Douglas World Cruisers complete the mission from Sand Point, Seattle , Washington.
[ 37] : 315 [ 38]
Charles Kingsford Smith , Charles Ulm , and crew
over 2 years
31 May 1928
June 1930
Southern Cross from Oakland, California
[ 39] [ 40]
Captain Ford and Crew
one month
2 December 1941
6 January 1942
Pan American World Airways ' Pacific Clipper the Boeing 314 Clipper flying boat NC-18609(A) the first commercial plane flight to circumnavigate the world from Treasure Island, San Francisco to LaGuardia Field .[ 41]
Rutan Voyager , Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager
9 days, 3 minutes and 44 seconds
14 December 1986
23 December 1986
first aircraft to fly around the world without stopping or refueling from Edwards Air Force Base
[ 42]
Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones
19 days, 21 hours, and 55 minutes
1 March 1999
21 March 1999
Breitling Orbiter 3 first balloon to fly around the world non-stop from Swiss Alpine village of Château-d'Oex
[ 43]
See also
References
^ a b c Townsend, George Henry; Martin, Frederick W. (1862). The Manual of Dates: a Dictionary of Reference to All the Most Important Events in the History of Mankind to be Found in Authentic Records . p. 217 . Retrieved 5 May 2015 .
^ An Historical Account of the Circumnavigation of the Globe: And of the Progress of Discovery in the Pacific Ocean, from the Voyage of Magellan to the Death of Cook . Harper & brothers. 1837. pp. 100 .
^ Australian Joint Copying Project Handbook: Miscellaneous (M series) . National Library Australia. 1998. p. 29. ISBN 9780642106964 . Retrieved 5 May 2015 .
^ Simpson, Sir George (1847). An overland journey round the world: during the years 1841 and 1842 . Lea and Blanchard.
^ https://www.thecornpoppy.com/2020/02/marco-polo-and-bully-forbes.html
^ Wilson, Derek (2003). A Brief History of the Circumnavigators . Constable & Co. ISBN 9781472113290 .
^ Wilson, Derek (2003). A Brief History of the Circumnavigators . Constable & Co. ISBN 9781472113290 .
^ Baldwin, John (2007). Last Flag Down: The Epic Journey of the Last Confederate Warship . Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-5-557-76085-0 .
^ a b c "William Lightfoot Visscher, Journal profile, part one" . Skagitriverjournal.com. Retrieved 2013-07-20 .
^ Ruddick, Nicholas. “Nellie Bly, Jules Verne, and the World on the Threshold of the American Age.” Canadian Review of American Studies,
Volume 29, Number 1, 1999, p. 8
^ George Francis Train Sets the Record as the Fastest Person to Travel Round-The-World
^ "Sayre, James Willis (1877-1963)" .
^ The New York Times , "A Run Around the World", August 8, 1913
^ Corporation, Bonnier (October 1926). Popular Science . Bonnier Corporation.
^ Wells, Linton (1926). Around the World in Twenty-eight Days . Houghton Mifflin.
^ Glines, Carroll V. Round-the-world flights , Ch. 2 (3rd ed. 2003) (ISBN 978-1574884487 )
^ Geisenheyer, Max. "Mit 'Graf Zeppelin' Um Die Welt: Ein Bild-Buch". Frankfurter Societäts-Druckerei G.m.b.H., Frankfurt am Mein (Germany), 1929.
^ "Around the World with the Graf Zeppelin" . Modern Mechanics . November 1929. pp. 64– 65.
^ a b "Wiley H. Post" . First Flight Society. Retrieved: June 23, 2020.
^ Meunier, Claude. "WILEY POST" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine . Solo flights around the world . October 15, 2007. Retrieved: December 6, 2012.
^ "A Rich Young Texan with a Poet's Face Gets Hero's Welcome on World Flight." Life , July 25, 1938, pp. 9–11, 14. Retrieved: October 14, 2012.
^ "Around the World in 91 Hours" . Historical Marker Project website . Retrieved July 27, 2016 .
^ Waggoner, Walter H. (March 3, 1949). "First in History; High Officials Greet the Plane as It Ends Hop at Fort Worth" . nytimes. Retrieved 23 August 2014 .
^ Morris had co-piloted the Gallagher flight in '49
^ Airlift Tanker: History of U.S. Airlift and Tanker Forces . Turner Publishing Company. 1995. ISBN 9781563111259 .
^ a b Bonner, Sara "The fastest man in the atmosphere" in The Times , 12 January 1980, p.3.
^ Cramoisi, George (2010). Air Crash Investigations: The End of the Concorde Era, the Crash of Air France Flight 4590 . Lulu. p. 518. ISBN 978-0-557-84950-5 .
^ "French Concorde to attempt round-the-world record". Anchorage Daily News . 12 October 1992.
^ "Aerial Circumnavigation: Records" . The Postal History of ICAO . Retrieved 20 July 2024 .
^ "Fastest circumnavigation by passenger aircraft" . Guinness World Records . 16 August 1995. Retrieved 12 May 2019 .
^ "Aerial Circumnavigation: Records" . The Postal History of ICAO . Retrieved 20 July 2024 .
^ "National Aviation Hall of Fame" . Archived from the original on 2020-12-07. Retrieved 2020-08-15 .
^ Fossett sets record for longest nonstop flight February 11, 2006
^ "Fossett sets solo flight record " Archived November 6, 2005, at the Wayback Machine – BBC News article dated March 3, 2005
^ "Fossett makes history " Archived March 5, 2005, at the Wayback Machine – CNN.com article dated March 4, 2005
^ First Round-The-World Solar Flight (SolarImpulse.com) Archived 20 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine
^ Thomas, Lowell (1925). The First World Flight . Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.
^ "First round-the-world flight." National Museum of the United States Air Force, 8 July 2009. Retrieved: 14 July 2017.
^ "7.30 report story about Charles Ulm" . ABCnet.au. 31 May 1928. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2009 .
^ Gallagher, Desmond (1986). Shooting Suns and Things: Transatlantic Fliers at Portmarnock . Kingford Press. ISBN 0951156519 .
^ Bull, John (August 2014). "The Long Way Round: The Plane that Accidentally Circumnavigated the World" . Lapsed Historian . Medium.com. Retrieved April 22, 2018 .
^ "Official FAI database" . Archived from the original on 2013-12-24. Retrieved 2012-12-23 .
^ Associated Press, "'Grandiose' Trip Ends: Balloonists tough down in Egyptian desert", March 22, 1999,