In history, you will always find contradicting information. However, MayflowerHistory.com is the source of this answer: After many complications, the Pilgrims departed on September 6, 1620. They sighted land (Cape Cod) on November 9, 1620. Therefore, it took the Mayflower about 66 days to cross the Atlantic Ocean. For some perspective on this time scale, one of my ancestors sailed from Antwerp Belgium to Port of Quebec, Canada in only 11 days in 1910.
1620 for 66 days
The wind. it took him and his crew 64 days to cross the Atlantic Ocean.
The Mayflower took 65 days. Christopher Columbus' voyage to "The New World" took about 60 days, also.
The wind. it took him and his crew 64 days to cross the Atlantic Ocean.
30-40 daysHow_long_did_it_take_to_cross_Atlantic_before_the_first_transatlantic_flights
A 600 PSI steam ship could cut across the Atlantic Ocean in about eight days if it went at full speed the whole time.
On April 20, 1957, the Mayflower Replica set sail from Brixton, England and crossed the Atlantic Ocean and arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts on June 13, 1957. The Mayflower Replica recreated the voyage of the original Mayflower. It took 55 days.
you can fly accross the Atlantic in about 6 hours, passenger ships take sbout 6 days
I would say it would be 4-8 weeks
At 30 knots it would take about 6 days for an Aircraft Carrier to cross the Atlantic. And about 10 days to cross the Pacific.
No. The Titanic was intended entirely for transportation. In those days, there was no other way to cross the Atlantic Ocean, except by ship.
You need to cross the Panama canal. er - the canal is used by ships to cross Panama (proper noun). You don't cross "the" panana or corss the panama canal. You'd cross Panama to shortcut between the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean saving 8 days sailing around Cape Horn.