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How Pearl Harbor forced the world’s first around-the-world commercial flight

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December 7, 2021 at 7:00 a.m. EST
Pan Am's Pacific Clipper, a Boeing 314, in an undated archive photograph. It was flown around the globe to avoid World War II after Pearl Harbor was attacked in 1941. (H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock/Getty Images)
10 min

Jack Poindexter walked briskly into the Liberty House department store on King Street in downtown Honolulu. It was Dec. 2, 1941, and palm trees swayed to the gentle rhythm of the trade winds that sunny Tuesday morning.

The chief flight radio officer on Pan Am Flight NC18602 needed a spare shirt. He had left California unexpectedly the day before as a stand-in for an ill radio man onboard the Pacific Clipper, a large flying boat — essentially a seaplane on steroids.