London (CNN) — What was it like to fly on the first ever jet engine transatlantic flight?
Former s British Overseas Airways Corporation air steward Peggy Thorne, 91, says the experience was unforgettable.
Airplanes had been criss-crossing the Atlantic since the 1930s -- with BOAC rival Pan American inaugurating the world's first transatlantic passenger service in June 1939.
But before 1958, these transatlantic flights took up to 20 hours, with several stops along the way. The BOAC milestone achievement cut this lengthy journey to the roughly 7-hour direct stint we're familiar with today.
Amazing experience
Peggy Thorne, pictured left, in her BOAC uniform ahead of the first transatlantic jet engine flight in 1958 and the crew on board the BOAC Comet.
Courtesy British Airways
As a young woman, Thorne had a thirst for adventure. It was this desire to explore the world that led her to become a flight attendant.
"I suppose in the 1950s, there were not a lot of opportunities to travel, and I was then a secretary in the foreign office, so I'd seen a bit of the world," she recalls. "And I thought, I don't know, it seems a lot more interesting than what I'm doing now and so I applied, joined, stayed throughout my career."
Thorne says the tasks she did on board flights were pretty much exactly what air stewards do today -- and she would know, in the lead up to the anniversary celebrations, Thorne spent the day with British Airways cabin crew members doing their training on flight simulators.
"I was so impressed with the way it was laid out with the mock-ups of the aircraft, because in the dark ages when I did my training, I don't think we had an aircraft to train on," she laughs.
Thorne, pictured center, with British Airways staff Sophie Picton, left, and Nadine Wood, right.
Courtesy British Airways
One big difference was that air travel in the mid-twentieth century was still very much an opulent, luxurious affair -- putting some of the swankiest First Class cabins of 2018 to shame.
"On the Comet 4, when it first came in, of course, it was all super luxury, reclining chairs, first class silver service," says Thorne. "But I mean its service otherwise has not changed a great deal."
Customers enjoyed cocktails and canapes, a five-course lunch with wines and afternoon tea.
Rich and famous
Passengers relaxing on the sleeper seats in the new Comet 4 during a demonstration flight at Hatfield, the British airfield, prior to the inaugural flight.
Courtesy Douglas Miller/Keystone/Getty Images
On the New York-London route, Thorne met many fascinating, often famous figures -- perhaps unsurprising when you consider nabbing a seat on one of these flights would set you back the equivalent of over $1000.
"It was such a novel thing, so people coming up the steps you'd recognize them -- film stars and diplomats and people -- and obviously they wanted to be the first to be on this wonderful new aircraft, which it was. It was a lovely aircraft."
On board the first ever-flight were dignitaries, press and the chairman of BOAC -- plus a last-minute assemblage of 'regular' fare-paying passengers.
"When we left London, as a crew we didn't know whether we would get the noise clearance test from Idlewild [now John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York] which was the airport we were flying to, because the Americans had a very strict thing about flying over population areas and Pan American was hot on our heels. We rather thought 'Well, they'll give it to them.'"
Indeed, Pan American was eager to be the first airline to fly an aircraft -- in its case a Boeing 707 -- across the Atlantic. In the end, Pan Am was beaten to the post by BOAC by just three weeks.
Peggy Thorne, right, with the crew of the first transatlantic jet engine flight.
Courtesy British Airways
The BOAC crew flew their airplane over to the US a couple of days before the October 4 flight. When the plane landed in New York, Thorne says they stripped the aircraft to ensure it was light and would pass the noise clearance test. Once they got the go-ahead, there was a mad dash to find passengers to fill out the airplane.
"We rang around New York to see if there were any fare paying passengers who could come on board by 7:00 the next morning," says Thorne. "The company managed to find 15 who'd already paid for flights when this happened. So what was lovely is we did have privately fare paying passengers on board."
On October 4, two Comets departed London and New York, each attempting the transatlantic journey. The London-New York flight had to stop in Newfoundland, Canada to refuel, but the New York-London flight, which Thorne served on, reached London in record-breaking time.
The Comet 4, pictured, was powered by four Rolls Royce Avon jet engines.
Courtesy Keystone/Getty Images
Thanks to favorable winds -- a phenomenon that still impacts the speediness of aircraft on this route today -- the flight arrived in just 6 hours, 12 minutes.
The Comet 4 was powered by four Rolls Royce jet engines buried in pairs in each wing. Its cruising range was over 3,000 miles at an altitude of between 35,000 and 40,000 feet.
The Comet might have helped BOAC win the transatlantic jet race, but the Boeing 777 ended up being the aircraft used for both BOAC and Pan Am's transatlantic flights -- thanks to its larger seat capacity.
Fond memories
Thorne loved being on board the inaugural New York-London flight, but she says it wasn't her favorite route.
"I used to try and stay on the Tokyo-Australia line, because we had Rome, Beirut, places like that, which to me were far more interesting than going to New York," she says.
Over the years Thorne's friends and family "got used to" her jet setting adventures, she says. Her career was part of a new chapter, the Jet Age, where fast transatlantic travel became an everyday reality.
She's thrilled, she says, to return to British Airways HQ to relive her high-flying youth.
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