On 16 October 1930, Garden embarked on a flight from
Croydon Aerodrome, London, to Wyndham Aerodrome in
Western Australia. Before the 18-day flight in a second-hand
De Havilland Gipsy Moth, he had only 40 hours' solo flying experience. He flew in concert with
Mrs Victor Bruce from
Jask, Iran, to
Rangoon,
Burma, part of her record-setting air-sea circumnavigation. In February 1931, Garden became the first to land a plane on Stewart Island. The landing was recreated 90 years later, in February 2021, using a Tiger Moth. ,
Isle of Man, Tuesday, 30 April 1935. Left to right: T.J. Rubens and J.J. Faragher, vice-chairman and chairman of Ramsey Town Commissioners;
Captain Oscar Garden; Alderman J. Skillicorn (Mayor of Douglas); Percy Shimmin (Douglas Town Clerk) and W.E. Faragher (Ramsey Town Clerk) During his time operating for
United Airways Limited Captain Garden was instrumental in the establishment of scheduled commercial air services from
Hall Caine Airport, Isle of Man, during the mid 1930s. The Manx headquarters of the operation were situated at Hall Caine with
Captain Garden appointed by United Airways to supervise the flying operation. A major feature article "Sundowner of the Skies – Mary Garden takes flight with her father" on his 1930 flight from England to Australia was published in the
Australian Financial Review in 2005. In 2019,
Sundowner of the Skies: The Story of Oscar Garden, The Forgotten Aviator was published, written by one of his daughters, Mary Garden. It was shortlisted for the NSW Premier's History Award 2020 for a book of international significance. In 2020, Oscar's youngest daughter Annamaria Aurelia Garden self-published her own book "Oscar Garden: A Tale of One Man’s Love of Flying". One review of the two books noted that it was odd to have two biographies written about the same person from two different familial perspectives, but that they complement each other. ==References==