Round-the-world flight Having set records on land and water, Bruce looked to the skies. As early as 1928 she joined the Mayfair Flying Club and by January 1930 was the owner of a
Gipsy Moth. She did not take her first flying lesson until 25 May 1930, the day after
Amy Johnson completed her record-setting flight to Australia. Bruce learned to fly at the Brooklands School of Flying; her instructors were G. E. Lowdell and Capt. H. Duncan Davis. Bruce soloed on 22 June 1930 and received her A-Licence #2855 on 26 July. She purchased a
Blackburn Bluebird IV (registered 'G-ABDS') with a
de Havilland Gipsy II engine from Auto-Auctions Ltd. in Burlington Gardens, London, in July 1930. It was sent to the Blackburn factory in
Brough, East Yorkshire, for modifications in preparation for an attempt to fly solo around the world. In her 1931 work ''The Bluebird's Flight'', Bruce claimed she had been in an aeroplane only once prior to purchasing the Bluebird and that she did not care for flying. She went on to claim she made the purchase, commenced training, went solo (in six days) and was licensed all within that same month of July 1930. On 25 September 1930, she named the aircraft
Bluebird and took off from
Heston Aerodrome. She flew east with stops in Germany, Austria, Yugoslavia, Turkey, Syria and Iraq. An oil leak caused a forced landing on the shore of the Persian Gulf, where she was sheltered for two days by
Baluchi tribesmen before a British rescue party reached her. After a delay of several days for repairs, she flew on to India, Burma, Siam (Thailand), and French Indo-China (Vietnam). Torrential monsoon rains forced a landing in a jungle clearing beside the Mekong River; she contracted malaria and her flight was further delayed. She flew on to Hanoi, Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Seoul, making the first flight across the
Yellow Sea. On 24 November 1930, having covered in 25 flying days, she reached Tokyo. She crossed the Pacific aboard the to
Vancouver. On her flight across North America an undercarriage failure on landing at
Medford, Oregon caused extensive damage, and meant a delay of another week. She reached her announced destination of her mother's birthplace,
New Albany, Indiana, by way of San Francisco, San Diego, St. Louis and Chicago. A one-week delay followed a crash on takeoff from Baltimore, and she finally reached New York City in early February 1931. She sailed on the to Le Havre, and on 19 February 1931 flew to
Lympne Airport, having flown about . On 20 February 1931, she was given an aerial escort by
Amy Johnson,
Winifred Spooner and others to
Croydon Airport, where a reception of press and celebrities awaited her. She was the first person to fly from England to Japan, the first to fly across the Yellow Sea, and the first woman to fly around the world alone (crossing the oceans by ship).
Air-to-air refuelling , Mrs Victor Bruce,
Amy Johnson, Lady
Lillian Shelmerdine,
Mrs Pender Chalmers &
Jim Mollison at Atlantic Park Southampton in 1932. In July 1932, Bruce purchased a
Saro Windhover amphibious aircraft (G-ABJP), named it
City of Portsmouth, and had the undercarriage temporarily removed. She also purchased a
Bristol F.2 (G-ACXA), and had it converted as a refuelling tanker. During August 1932, over the Solent, she used the two aircraft in three failed attempts to break the world flight-refuelled endurance record by flying non-stop for four weeks. Her co-pilot was Flt. Lt. John B. W. Pugh, AFC, later employed by Luxury Air Tours and Air Dispatch.
Flying circus In early 1933, she was invited to join the British Hospital Air Pageants flying circus, and purchased the sole
Miles Satyr (G-ABVG) in the name of her company Luxury Air Tours Ltd., for use in aerobatic displays. She also purchased a
Fairey Fox (G-ACAS) from a scrapyard for £2 10s, plus £10 for an engine, then had it modified at
Hanworth Aerodrome for passenger-carrying duties. She then trained and qualified for her commercial pilot's 'B' licence. The Fox crashed in July 1933, and she left the flying circus.
Cape Town autogiro attempt On 25 November 1934, Bruce took off from Lympne Airport in a
Cierva C.30A autogiro (G-ACVX), headed for
Cape Town, in an attempt on the record for the longest autogiro flight, but the aircraft was damaged at
Nîmes in France after . ==Commercial aviation 1934–1936==