• Bertaud flew air mail routes along the famous "Hells Stretch" between
Cleveland and Hadley Field. • Pulitzer Race,
Omaha, Nebraska – In 1921, Bertaud flew a 400 hp
Ansaldo A-1 Balilla equipped with a
Curtiss D-12 engine against
Bert Acosta, placing fourth. • Kansas City Derby,
Kansas City, Kansas – In November 1921, Bertaud won the American Legion Aerial Derby over a course in 1 hour. • Endurance record,
Roosevelt Field – In January 1922, Bertaud and
Edward Stinson won the Aviation medal of merit of the
Aero Club of America for their 27-hour world endurance record flown during a snowstorm in the
Junkers-Larsen JL-6 on December 30, 1921. The aircraft flew , also breaking the French-held world's record for distance. • Orteig Prize - Charles A. Levine, owner of
Columbia Aircraft Corp, and the sole
Wright-Bellanca WB-2 sought after by pilot
Charles Lindbergh, bumped Bertaud from his copilot position on an attempt at the
Orteig Prize. Bertaud was promised a settlement to his family if he and his co-pilot
Clarence D. Chamberlin crashed, and the prize money if they completed the flight, but Levine refused to sign the document. Bertaud first objected, then later offered to purchase the Columbia for himself. Bertaud filed an injunction, and stalled the flight. Lindbergh took off winning the prize. Levine fired Bertaud, and, two weeks later, had Chamberlin fly him to
Berlin, Germany, as the first transatlantic passenger. They landed in
Eisleben, breaking Lindbergh's distance mark by . Following the flight, Bertaud attempted to have Bellanca, the designer of the Columbia, build a transatlantic plane for a non-stop attempt on Rome in spite of Levine. The aircraft could not be built in a timely manner. Instead, an agreement was made with Philip Payne, editor of the
William Randolph Hearst paper the
New York Daily Mirror, for a
Fokker F.VIIA aircraft named
Old Glory, and a spare seat for Payne, in exchange for the publicity rights. ==Legacy==