Amelia Earhart, the first woman to cross the Atlantic by air.
's arrival in Burry Port. The event which put Burry Port at the centre of the World's attention, and for which it is still known globally. The 18th of June 1928, saw the surprise arrival of the seaplane "Friendship" a
Fokker FVIIb 3m, whose crew consisted of, pilot
Wilmer Stultz, with mechanic and co-pilot Louis Gordon and the flight's commander, a then unknown social worker from Boston named
Amelia Earhart. The plane came down on the Burry estuary between Burry Port and the villiage of
Pwll at 12:40pm, at low tide. After many hours on the estuary, deliberating whether to refuel on the estuary and fly on to Southampton (contrary to popular belief, a seaplane's journey does not end when it is still at sea), to end their transatlantic flight in front of their sponsors, who were waiting there.But It was decided that, due to the racing tide, they wouldn't attempt to refuel but come ashore at
Burry Port Harbour, where their journey would finally end and where Amelia Earhart would become the first woman to cross the Atlantic by air. They spent the night at the Ashburnham Hotel. The next morning, sitting up in bed and surrounded by members of the press, Earhart said to Alice Jones, the proprietor of the hotel, "
How lovely your country is, The stillness and the silence brings back again the almost awesome feeling which came to me as, hour after hour, we pushed forward through the thick clouds and fog. It was as if we were alone in the world. To think that 48 hours ago I was in America and now I am in Wales!”. The
Friendship departed Burry Port Harbour at approximately 11 am. on the 19th of June 1928, beginning the final leg of its journey to
Southampton, but not without a final moment of drama. Among the spectators that morning was Sir
Arthur Whitten Brown, who—alongside
John Alcock—had completed the first non-stop transatlantic flight in 1919. Living in nearby
Swansea, Whitten Brown had travelled to Burry Port with his family to congratulate Earhart and present her with a bouquet of flowers. A boat was dispatched to carry him out to the
Friendship, but unaware of his approach, the crew had already begun their departure. As a result, a potentially historic meeting between the first man and the first woman to cross the Atlantic nonstop by air was narrowly missed. On August the 8th 1930, a monument commemorating the events of June the 18th 1928 was unveiled by Sir
Arthur Whitten Brown. The monument consists of a stone column with water fountains at each corner, surmounted by a weathervane in the shape of Friendship. The inscription on the monument reads- " ERECTED In commemoration of Miss Amelia Earhart, of Boston, USA. The first woman to fly across the Atlantic ocean, who, with her companions Wilmur (sic) Stultz & Louis Gordon, flew from Trepassey, Newfoundland in 20 hours and 49 minutes in the seaplane "Friendship" on June 18th 1928." ==Transport==