Background
Bertaud was born in Alameda, California on September 20, 1895.
Bertaud was born in Alameda, California on September 20, 1895.
Aircraft owner Charles Albert Levine wanted to fly in his place, and an injunction by Bertaud against Levine prevented the flight. As a boy, he built and flew in a glider from Popular Mechanics plans. He was a licensed pilot at the age of 18.
In World War I, Bertaud served in the United States. Air service as a lieutenant.
Air Mail, Bertaud flew mail routes along the famous "Hells Stretch" between Cleveland and Hadley Field. Air racing
Pulitzer Race, Omaha, Nebraska – In 1921, Bertaud flew a 400 hp Ansando Curtiss A-1 Balilla against Bert Acosta, placing fourth.
The aircraft flew 2500 miles, also breaking the French-held world"s record for distance. Bertaud was promised a settlement to his family if he and his co-pilot Clarence Doctorate. 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 Germany as the first transatlantic passenger.
They landed in Eisleben, and breaking Lindbergh"s distance mark by 295 miles.
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 Phillip Payne, editor of the William Randolph Hearst paper the Daily Mirror, for a Fokker VIIA aircraft, and a spare seat for Payne, in exchange for the publicity rights. Bertaud, Hill and Phillip Payne took off in the overweight plane over the Atlantic.
The plane did not make it to the destination, and only a 34-foot section of wing was found 700 miles east of Cape Race, Newfoundland.
Bertaud was lost at sea. In 1928, the Ontario Surveyor General named a number of lakes in the northwest of the province to honour aviators who had perished during 1927, mainly in attempting oceanic flights. These include Bertaud Lake (5090°North 9071°West / 5090.
-9071), Hill Lake (5056°North 9077°West / 5056.
-9077) and Payne Lake (5085°North 9054°West / 5085.