Content description:
Negative shows a group of four men and two women posing in front of a car parked in front of the plane the "Oklahoma." The whole plane is visible in this shot with "The Travel Air Transport" written on the side of the plane underneath the pilot's window and "Oklahoma" written on the main body of the plane. Most likely two of the men in the photo are Bennett Griffin and Al Henly. The woman at the end of the group is holding her hat to her head to keep it from being blown off. In the background are several people standing around the plane behind a rope. The "Oklahoma" was one of the competitors in the Dole Race or Dole Derby which was an air race from Oakland to Hawaii from August 16-18, 1927. There were fifteen original entries but due to various accidents and mechanical problems only eight planes actually took off and only two ever reached Hawaii. The race was sponsored by James Dole of Dole Hawaiian Pineapple. First prize was $25,000 and second $10,000. The "Oklahoma" was flown by Bennett Griffin with Al Henly as navigator. The plane was sponsored by Phillips Petroleum. The "Oklahoma" was the first plane to take off in the race at 12 o'clock on August 16, 1927. It returned to the Oakland Airport a little after 1:00 apparently because of engine trouble. The plane never returned to the race due to a bad engine. The pilot, Griffin, later became manager of Washington National Airport and Henly, the navigator, was killed in a plane crash in Texas in 1929. Information on the Dole Race provided by articles in the "American Aviation Historical Society" journal, fall and winter 1975 written by Lesley N. Forden.