Thursday, June 28, 2007

Globetrotter ?

I just wanted to send out my props to the first
black man and the youngest to circle the globe
in a plane. Congratulations Irving!


Barrington Irving kept his fans in suspense Wednesday as he circled the airport in his plane Inspiration — now marked with flag stickers of the countries he visited on a worldwide adventure. After a journey that lasted more than three months, the 23-year-old landed his single-engine Lancair Columbia 400 to a hero's welcome at the Opa-Locka Executive Airport. "I am home," Irving said quietly when he stepped to a microphone.

He said the long flight had challenged him mentally and physically. "I am proud to have had the opportunity to live my dream," he said. Irving, a Florida Memorial University aerospace student, said he was the first black person as well as the youngest person to fly solo around the world, though it was unclear how the claims would be validated. The National Aeronautic Assn., the aviation record-keeping authority in the U.S., does not track pilots' age, sex or ethnicity, said Nathan Rohrbaugh, who helps coordinate records at the organization.

Hundreds of people gathered at the airport hangar to welcome Irving. Many wore buttons and cooled off with fans bearing Irving's image. A banner in the hangar read, "Live, Dream, Fly!"Beneath cloudy skies, the Jamaican-born Irving circled the airport a few times before touching down on the runway about 10:30 a.m. He immediately reunited with family and close friends."They told me I was too young," Irving told well-wishers. "They told me I didn't have enough money…. They told me it's going to take me forever.

They told me I'd never come back home. Well, guess what?" Irving said with a smile.The young pilot's adventure started in South Florida, where he founded Experience Aviation. The Miami-based group encourages young minority group members to pursue aviation careers. People tracked Irving's progress on the organization's website, experienceaviation.org, where he posted photos and blogged about his journey. He visited U.S. cities to talk about aviation and made similar stops in Greece, Egypt and Japan.





This Article Continues Here





Get your copy of the award winning King:
"From Atlanta to the Mountain top
It's the 3-Hour Docudrama that
tells the story of the Civil Rights
movement and the life of
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
To learn more and hear
excerpts from this treasured
program,click here:
http://www.kingprogram.net/

No comments: