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Unlocking the Sky: Glenn Hammond Curtiss and the Race to Invent the Airplane PDF

271 Pages·2012·1.23 MB·English
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UNLOCKING THE SKY l G L E N N H A M M O N D C U RT I SS A N D T H E R A C E TO I N V E N T T H E A I R P L A N E SETH SHULMAN For Benjamin, who loves inventing Let us hope that the advent of a successful flying machine, now only dimly foreseen...w ill bring nothing but good into the world; that it shall abridge distance, make all parts of the globe accessible, bring men into closer relation with each other, advance civilization, and hasten the promised era in which there shall be nothing but peace and goodwill among all men. —Octave Chanute, 1894 C O N T E N T S Epigraph iii LANGLEY’S FOLLY 1 PROLOGUE REWRITING AVIATION HISTORY PA R T I INTRIGUE AT HAMMONDSPORT 25 ONE WRIGHTS AND WRONGS 41 TWO AMERICA OR BUST 60 THREE REACHING FOR THE SKY PA RT II CAPTAINS OF THE AIR 81 FOUR SKY DANCING 103 FIVE FLIGHT OF THE JUNE BUG 122 SIX vi CONTENTS SKY KING 14 4 SEVEN WARPED WINGS PA RT III GROUNDED 16 9 EIGHT FLIGHT OF A HERO 18 6 NINE NEW BEGINNINGS 20 5 TEN ALL BUT THE LEGACY 223 EPILOGUE 23 1 APPENDIX A PARTIAL LIST OF INVENTIONS BY GLENN CURTISS 23 5 S OURCES 24 5 ACKNOWLED GMENTS 24 7 INDEX About the Author Other Books by Seth Shulman Credits Cover Copyright About the Publisher P R O L O G U E LANGLEY’S FOLLY Flight by machines heavier than air is unpractical and insignificant, if not utterly impossible. —Simon Newcomb, prominent scientist, 1902 B y midafternoon on December 8, 1903, dozens of spectators have gathered on the sunny banks of the Potomac River south of Washington, D.C. They have come to glimpse the future. Most have made their way from the city in horse-drawn car- riages; some in newfangled motorcars. And now, with overcoats and caps, blankets and field glasses, they huddle against the bitter breeze, chatting excitedly on the riverbank. Scores more have come via the Potomac from nearby wharves, navigating chunks of bob- bing ice. They peer from the decks of barges, yachts, and sailboats moored for the unannounced event. Prominent among the onlookers is a jaunty group of newspaper reporters. Notepads at the ready, they ride the edgy adrenaline of a 2 UNLOCKING THE SKY big story and busy themselves picking out the faces of prominent members of Washington society: Elihu Root, President Teddy Roosevelt’s secretary of war, is on hand, as is Army General Wallace F. Randolph and other of the nation’s top military brass, scientists, and politicians. Skeptical by trade, the reporters maintain a glib air but, secretly, each recognizes the day’s potential. Possibly—just possibly—they could be ringside for the most momentous spectacle of the young century. This cold, blustery afternoon, all eyes are trained on a large houseboat in the middle of one of the Potomac’s widest sections, where it converges with the Anacostia River. Pacing back and forth on the deck of the ungainly craft is the unmistakable figure of Samuel Pierpont Langley, venerable head of the Smithsonian Insti- tution, attired for the occasion in a boating cap and woolen over- coat, his neatly trimmed beard shining white in the afternoon sun. There on deck, Langley notes how gusty the day has become; the squalls have picked up to 18 miles per hour. From Langley’s own account of the day, we know that he is worried as the wind speed rises and the afternoon wears into early evening. But you could never see it in his demeanor. Ever conscious of his role as pro- ject director, Langley exudes his usual straight-backed pride and confidence—characteristics sometimes taken for arrogance. A prominent scientist with an international reputation, Langley is well known by 1903 for his heretical belief that a machine heavier than the air can carry a human being in flight. Yet he has done far more than champion this view. All but abandoning his field of astronomy, Langley has pioneered the embryonic field of “aerial navigation” for fifteen years and published his results widely. Based on the success of Langley’s efforts, the U.S. War Department has secretly funded his five-year effort to build a full-scale prototype of

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.