This Day in Aviation History — April 26

|Randall Wagnon
This Day in Aviation History — April 26

A look back at the moments that shaped the skies we fly today.

April 26, 1962 — The First Flight of the Hawker Siddeley Trident

On April 26, 1962, the Hawker Siddeley Trident took to the skies for the first time from Hatfield Aerodrome in England. It was a sleek, three-engine jet designed exclusively for British European Airways — and while it never achieved the commercial dominance of the Boeing 727, it quietly made history in a way that affects every single commercial flight today.

The Trident was the first commercial aircraft in the world to perform a fully automatic blind landing in revenue service — touching down in near-zero visibility conditions using an autoland system that was, at the time, nothing short of miraculous. It proved that aircraft could land themselves safely, opening the door to the sophisticated avionics and automation that modern airliners depend on.

Every time a widebody touches down in fog, the Trident deserves a quiet nod of respect.

The Unsung Heroes of Aviation

Not every milestone comes with a parade. Some of the most important moments in aviation history happened quietly — in test facilities, on obscure runways, in the minds of engineers who just wanted to solve the next problem.

British engineering, clean lines, and the pure elegance of purpose-built aviation — at Cleared4Tees, we appreciate the artistry.

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Blue skies and tailwinds — The Cleared4Tees Crew ✈️

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