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On that day, Lindbergh took off from Roosevelt Field in his Ryan NYP with 451 gallons of fuel and five sandwiches to sustain him on his journey. Despite fog and sleet that obsucurred his visibility and forced him to fly at altitudes as low as 10 feet, Lindbergh arrived over Paris at about 10 PM local time. He landed at Le Bourget Field 33 hours and 30 minutes after leaving New York thereby winning the $25,000 Orteig Prize and becoming the first pilot to fly from America to Europe nonstop. The flight covered over 3,610 miles (6,810 km) at an average speed of about 105 mph (175 km/h).
Although Lindbergh had wanted to fly the return trip, US President Calvin Coolidge refused to let him do so fearing
that the new world hero would be lost if something were to go wrong. Lindbergh then returned to New York City
aboard the Navy cruiser USS Memphis where he was honored with the largest ticker-tape parade in history.
- answer by Jeff Scott, 27 May 2001
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