'Raymond Orteig' (
1870 -
1939) was the
New York City hotel owner who offered the
Orteig Prize for the first non-stop
transatlantic flight between New York and
Paris.
Orteig was born in the south of
France, in Louvie-Juzon, Bearn, but moved to New York on
August 24,
1912. He started working as a bus boy and cafe manager but soon managed to acquire two hotels (the Hotel Lafayette and the Brevoort Hotel in
Greenwich Village).
Orteig offered the prize in
1919 after attending a dinner honouring the American
ace Eddie Rickenbacher. Many of the speeches involved Franco-American friendship and Rickenbacher had looked forward to the day that the two countries were linked by air. He was also strongly inspired by contact with French pilots, members of a French mission sent during
World War I, in 1917-18, to New York to help the USA build the US Air Force.
The prize was won in
1927 by
Charles Lindbergh.