by Jim Low
They worried constantly about the amount of petrol they used. There were long periods of flying 'blind', relying only on their navigational instruments and guesswork to fly through the night. After stops in Honolulu and Suva, the Southern Cross finally reached Brisbane on the morning of June 9, completing a journey of just under 12 000 kilometres across the Pacific Ocean.
My father often spoke to me about Smithy, as Kingsford-Smith was often affectionately named. I remember him telling me about the night the Southern Cross became lost on the return flight over the Tasman Sea in October, 1928. Ulm and Smithy were flying from New Zealand to Richmond, on the outskirts of Sydney. They encountered strong headwinds on the homeward fight, which took nearly twenty-three hours. (The Richmond to Christchurch leg of the crossing had taken them almost fourteen and a half hours.) My father was attending an evening picture show at the Royal Theatre in Willoughby, on Sydney's lower north shore. He remembered the film being interrupted to inform the audience about the airmen's plight. After the pictures, my father went home and, on his crystal set, was able to pick up the radio signals from the Richmond aeroplane base, where the Southern Cross was expected to land. My father attached his “Star” aerial to the family clothesline to obtain a better reception. At one stage while flying down the coast, the Southern Cross flew low over my father's suburb. Being such a very dark night, the airmen had decided to use the lights from the railway line on Sydney's northern shore to guide them until they found their bearings.
“Believe me,” he recalled, “it was the thrill of my life when that giant 'plane went over my head by only a few yards, with twenty-seven cylinders barking and flames flowing out from their twenty-seven exhaust pipes!” When the Southern Cross finally touched down at Richmond, Kingsford-Smith announced that there was only enough petrol for another half-hour of flying. “So ended a great flight,” my father summed up his recollections. Another time my father mentioned how he saw a calendar that featured a painting of Smithy's head, above clouds and five aeropanes flying in formation. Wanting a copy for himself, with perseverance, he eventually tracked one down. He also made a plaster cast of Smithy's head in his aviation attire and painted it gold. For as long as I can remember it hung on the wall in our family home, along with the framed calendar painting. I now have them both hanging on the wall of my study. A few weeks after his death, I read Smithy and Ulm's book which had been such a favourite of my father. Like him, I was impressed by the story. Not long after this I wrote the song From Oakland to Brisbane about the Pacific crossing.
I reckon my father would have been very pleased with this happy turn of events. I also felt that if I never sang my song again, it had achieved more than I could ever have imagined.
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