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Calbraith Perry Rodgers

Calbraith Perry Rodgers (January 12, 1879 – April 3, 1912) was an American aviation pioneer. He made the first transcontinental airplane flight across the U.S. from September 17, 1911, to November 5, 1911, with dozens of stops, both intentional and accidental. The feat made him a national celebrity, but he was killed in a crash a few months later at an exhibition in California.

Calbraith Perry Rodgers
Rodgers in 1911
BornJanuary 12, 1879
DiedApril 3, 1912(1912-04-03) (aged 33)
Cause of deathAircrash
OccupationAviator
SpouseMabel Rodgers
RelativesOliver Hazard Perry
Matthew Calbraith Perry

Early life edit

Rodgers was born on January 12, 1879, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Calbraith Perry Rodgers and Maria Chambers Rodgers. His father, an Army captain, died on August 23, 1878, prior to his birth. Among his ancestors, Rodgers had Commodores John Rodgers, who was his paternal grandfather, Oliver Hazard Perry, his maternal great-grandfather, and Matthew Calbraith Perry, his great-grand uncle.[1] He was a cousin to John Rodgers, a naval aviation pioneer known for setting the record of longest non-stop flight by seaplane of 1992 miles (3206 km) on an attempt to fly from San Francisco to Honolulu in 1925.

In 1885, Rodgers contracted scarlet fever, which left him deaf in one ear and hearing impaired in the other,[2] which effectively barred him from following the family tradition of naval service. He received his education first at home and then at the Mercersburg Academy. In 1902, Rodgers joined his mother and sister in New York City. He became a member of the New York Yacht Club, and besides boating he rode motorcycles and drove cars. In 1906 he married Mabel Avis Graves; they had no children. The Rodgers resided in Havre de Grace, Maryland.

Aviation edit

In June 1911, Rodgers visited his cousin John, a naval aviator, who since March was studying at the Wright Company factory and attending flying school in Dayton, Ohio. Rodgers became interested in aviation. He received 90 minutes of flying lessons from Orville Wright, and purchased a Wright Flyer with John.[3] On August 7, 1911, he took his official flying examination at Huffman Prairie and became the 49th aviator licensed to fly by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale.[4] He was one of the first civilians to purchase an airplane.

Instead of flying home, Rodgers entered the 1911 Chicago International Aviation Meet, where he competed with the leading aviators of the time. He set several records, including the duration record, and won $11,285 in prize money.[3]

Cross-country flight edit

On October 10, 1910, publisher William Randolph Hearst offered the Hearst prize, US$50,000 to the first aviator to fly coast to coast, in either direction, in less than 30 days from start to finish. Rodgers persuaded J. Ogden Armour, of Armour and Company, to sponsor the flight, and in return he named the plane, a Wright Model EX, after Armour's grape soft drink Vin Fiz.[4] A special train of three cars, including sleeper, diner, and shop-on-wheels full of spare parts, was assembled to follow Rodgers, who planned to fly above the railroad tracks.[3] A competitor, James J. Ward, was also departing from New York in a Curtiss Pusher. He crashed and dropped out before he left New York state.

Rodgers left from Sheepshead Bay, New York, on September 17, 1911, at 4:30 pm. He reached Chicago, the only required stop, on October 8, 1911. His arrival to Chicago attracted national attention.[3]

 
Rodgers in Pasadena

To avoid the Rocky Mountains, he took a southerly route, flying through the Midwest until reaching Texas. He turned west after passing San Antonio. On November 5, 1911, he landed at Tournament Park in Pasadena, California, at 4:04 pm in front of 20,000 people, missing the prize deadline by 19 days. He left Pasadena on November 12, but crashed at Compton. After the Vin Fiz was repaired, on December 10, 1911, he reached Long Beach, California, flew some time above the Pacific Ocean, landed on a beach and taxied the plane into the ocean. About 50,000 people came to witness the completion of the first transcontinental east–west flight.[3]

Rodgers had carried the first transcontinental U.S. Mail pouch. The trip required 70 stops and endured countless crashes and aircraft malfunctions. (Rodgers paid $70 a week to the Wright brothers' technician, Charlie Taylor, who followed the Vin Fiz by train and performed necessary maintenance or repairs.[5][6]) The next transcontinental flight was made by Robert G. Fowler.

Death edit

 
Rodgers in 1912 fatal crash

On April 3, 1912, while making an exhibition flight over Long Beach, California, he flew into a flock of birds, causing the plane to crash into the ocean. His neck was broken and his thorax damaged by the engine of the airplane. He died a few moments later, a few hundred feet from where the Vin Fiz ended its transcontinental flight.[7] The aircraft in this last flight was the spare Model B he had carried in the special train during the transcontinental flight, rather than the Vin Fiz. The Vin Fiz itself was later given to the Smithsonian Institution by Calbraith's widow, Mabel Rodgers, and is now on display at the National Air and Space Museum.[8] According to contemporary records, his was the 127th airplane fatality since aviation began, and he was the 22nd American aviator to die in an accident.[9] He was also the first pilot who fatally crashed as a result of a bird strike.[10]

Rodgers was interred at Allegheny Cemetery in his hometown of Pittsburgh.

Rodgers was posthumously inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1964.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Patrick Clark Rodgers, Calbraith Perry [dead link], Pennsylvania Center for the Book, Pennsylvania State University, Spring 2010.
  2. ^ About DPA November 14, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Deaf Pilots Association. Retrieved November 13, 2016
  3. ^ a b c d e Charlie Wentz. Who Was Calbraith P. Rodgers? December 23, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, American Philatelist, November 2011.
  4. ^ a b Eckland, K. O. "The Epic Flight of the Vin Fiz Flyer". Aerofiles. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  5. ^ Strother, French (January 1912). "Flying Across The Continent: C. P. Rodgers And The First Aerial Trans-Continental Trip". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXIII: 339–345. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  6. ^ Strother, French (February 1912). "Flying Across The Continent: C. P. Rodgers And The First Aerial Trans-Continental Trip: Rodger's Trip From Kansas City To Pasadena". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXIII: 399–408. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  7. ^ "C. P. Rodgers' Aero Plunges Into Surf at Long Beach. Hundreds See Tragedy. Hero of First Transcontinental Flight Victim of His Own Daring. When Lifted From Wrecked Machine His Neck Is Found to Be Broken. Birdman's Home in Havre de Grace, Maryland. Cousin of Lieut. Rodgers in Navy's Aerial Corps. Victim Author of Theory of 'Etherial Asphyxia.'". The Washington Post. April 4, 1912. Calbraith P. Rodgers, the first man to cross the American continent in an aeroplane, was killed here instantly late today, when his biplane, in which he had been soaring over the ocean, fell from a height of 200 feet and buried him in the wreck. His neck was broken and his body mangled by the engine of his machine.
  8. ^ Vin Fiz at NASM https://airandspace.si.edu/collection-objects/wright-ex-vin-fiz December 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Aviator C.P. Rodgers Almost Instantly Killed. His Biplane Falls Distance of 200 Feet", Daily Times, Chattanooga, Tennessee, April 4, 1912
  10. ^ Thorpe, John (2003). (PDF). International Bird Strike Committee, IBSC 26 Warsaw. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 27, 2009. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
  11. ^ "Enshrinee Cal Rodgers". nationalaviation.org. National Aviation Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 28, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Eileen F. Lebow, Cal Rodgers and the Vin Fiz: the First Transcontinental Flight (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1989)
  • E. P. Stein, Flight of the Vin Fiz (New York: Arbor House, 1985) ISBN 0-87795-672-3.
  • Richard L. Taylor, The First Flight Across the United States: the Story of Calbraith Perry Rodgers and His Airplane, the Vin Fiz, (New York: F. Watts, 1993)
  • Linn's Stamp News; January 14, 2002, p. 14; "New 'Vin Fiz Flyer' card found and auctioned"
  • The New York Times; Wednesday, October 11, 1911; Air Record Broken By Aviator Rodgers; Exceeds Atwood's Cross-Country Flight Of 1,265 Miles By Making 1,398 To Date. Marshall, Missouri, October 10, 1911. C.P. Rodgers, the aviator who is trying to make a coast to coast flight, landed at Marshall at 4:23 o'clock this afternoon, exceeding the world's record for cross country aeroplane flight by 133 miles. The world' record of 1,265 miles was made by Henry Atwood in a recent flight from St. Louis to New York. Rodgers has flown 1,398 miles according to railroad mileage.

External links edit

  • Calbraith Rodgers bibliography[permanent dead link]
  • Early Aviators: Calbraith Rodgers
  • Smithsonian: Vin Fiz August 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • The Epic Flight of the Vin Fiz Flyer
  • "Calbraith Perry Rodgers". Find a Grave. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  • Calbraith Rodgers background and details regarding his 1911, Vin Fiz flight

calbraith, perry, rodgers, january, 1879, april, 1912, american, aviation, pioneer, made, first, transcontinental, airplane, flight, across, from, september, 1911, november, 1911, with, dozens, stops, both, intentional, accidental, feat, made, national, celebr. Calbraith Perry Rodgers January 12 1879 April 3 1912 was an American aviation pioneer He made the first transcontinental airplane flight across the U S from September 17 1911 to November 5 1911 with dozens of stops both intentional and accidental The feat made him a national celebrity but he was killed in a crash a few months later at an exhibition in California Calbraith Perry RodgersRodgers in 1911BornJanuary 12 1879Pittsburgh Pennsylvania U S DiedApril 3 1912 1912 04 03 aged 33 Long Beach California U S Cause of deathAircrashOccupationAviatorSpouseMabel RodgersRelativesOliver Hazard Perry Matthew Calbraith Perry Contents 1 Early life 2 Aviation 3 Cross country flight 4 Death 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editRodgers was born on January 12 1879 in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania to Calbraith Perry Rodgers and Maria Chambers Rodgers His father an Army captain died on August 23 1878 prior to his birth Among his ancestors Rodgers had Commodores John Rodgers who was his paternal grandfather Oliver Hazard Perry his maternal great grandfather and Matthew Calbraith Perry his great grand uncle 1 He was a cousin to John Rodgers a naval aviation pioneer known for setting the record of longest non stop flight by seaplane of 1992 miles 3206 km on an attempt to fly from San Francisco to Honolulu in 1925 In 1885 Rodgers contracted scarlet fever which left him deaf in one ear and hearing impaired in the other 2 which effectively barred him from following the family tradition of naval service He received his education first at home and then at the Mercersburg Academy In 1902 Rodgers joined his mother and sister in New York City He became a member of the New York Yacht Club and besides boating he rode motorcycles and drove cars In 1906 he married Mabel Avis Graves they had no children The Rodgers resided in Havre de Grace Maryland Aviation editIn June 1911 Rodgers visited his cousin John a naval aviator who since March was studying at the Wright Company factory and attending flying school in Dayton Ohio Rodgers became interested in aviation He received 90 minutes of flying lessons from Orville Wright and purchased a Wright Flyer with John 3 On August 7 1911 he took his official flying examination at Huffman Prairie and became the 49th aviator licensed to fly by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale 4 He was one of the first civilians to purchase an airplane Instead of flying home Rodgers entered the 1911 Chicago International Aviation Meet where he competed with the leading aviators of the time He set several records including the duration record and won 11 285 in prize money 3 Cross country flight editOn October 10 1910 publisher William Randolph Hearst offered the Hearst prize US 50 000 to the first aviator to fly coast to coast in either direction in less than 30 days from start to finish Rodgers persuaded J Ogden Armour of Armour and Company to sponsor the flight and in return he named the plane a Wright Model EX after Armour s grape soft drink Vin Fiz 4 A special train of three cars including sleeper diner and shop on wheels full of spare parts was assembled to follow Rodgers who planned to fly above the railroad tracks 3 A competitor James J Ward was also departing from New York in a Curtiss Pusher He crashed and dropped out before he left New York state Rodgers left from Sheepshead Bay New York on September 17 1911 at 4 30 pm He reached Chicago the only required stop on October 8 1911 His arrival to Chicago attracted national attention 3 nbsp Rodgers in Pasadena To avoid the Rocky Mountains he took a southerly route flying through the Midwest until reaching Texas He turned west after passing San Antonio On November 5 1911 he landed at Tournament Park in Pasadena California at 4 04 pm in front of 20 000 people missing the prize deadline by 19 days He left Pasadena on November 12 but crashed at Compton After the Vin Fiz was repaired on December 10 1911 he reached Long Beach California flew some time above the Pacific Ocean landed on a beach and taxied the plane into the ocean About 50 000 people came to witness the completion of the first transcontinental east west flight 3 Rodgers had carried the first transcontinental U S Mail pouch The trip required 70 stops and endured countless crashes and aircraft malfunctions Rodgers paid 70 a week to the Wright brothers technician Charlie Taylor who followed the Vin Fiz by train and performed necessary maintenance or repairs 5 6 The next transcontinental flight was made by Robert G Fowler Death edit nbsp Rodgers in 1912 fatal crash On April 3 1912 while making an exhibition flight over Long Beach California he flew into a flock of birds causing the plane to crash into the ocean His neck was broken and his thorax damaged by the engine of the airplane He died a few moments later a few hundred feet from where the Vin Fiz ended its transcontinental flight 7 The aircraft in this last flight was the spare Model B he had carried in the special train during the transcontinental flight rather than the Vin Fiz The Vin Fiz itself was later given to the Smithsonian Institution by Calbraith s widow Mabel Rodgers and is now on display at the National Air and Space Museum 8 According to contemporary records his was the 127th airplane fatality since aviation began and he was the 22nd American aviator to die in an accident 9 He was also the first pilot who fatally crashed as a result of a bird strike 10 Rodgers was interred at Allegheny Cemetery in his hometown of Pittsburgh Rodgers was posthumously inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1964 11 See also edit nbsp Aviation portal nbsp Biography portal Harry Nelson Atwood who previously attempted a transcontinental flight List of fatalities from aviation accidentsReferences edit Patrick Clark Rodgers Calbraith Perry dead link Pennsylvania Center for the Book Pennsylvania State University Spring 2010 About DPA Archived November 14 2016 at the Wayback Machine Deaf Pilots Association Retrieved November 13 2016 a b c d e Charlie Wentz Who Was Calbraith P Rodgers Archived December 23 2016 at the Wayback Machine American Philatelist November 2011 a b Eckland K O The Epic Flight of the Vin Fiz Flyer Aerofiles Retrieved December 9 2011 Strother French January 1912 Flying Across The Continent C P Rodgers And The First Aerial Trans Continental Trip The World s Work A History of Our Time XXIII 339 345 Retrieved July 10 2009 Strother French February 1912 Flying Across The Continent C P Rodgers And The First Aerial Trans Continental Trip Rodger s Trip From Kansas City To Pasadena The World s Work A History of Our Time XXIII 399 408 Retrieved July 10 2009 C P Rodgers Aero Plunges Into Surf at Long Beach Hundreds See Tragedy Hero of First Transcontinental Flight Victim of His Own Daring When Lifted From Wrecked Machine His Neck Is Found to Be Broken Birdman s Home in Havre de Grace Maryland Cousin of Lieut Rodgers in Navy s Aerial Corps Victim Author of Theory of Etherial Asphyxia The Washington Post April 4 1912 Calbraith P Rodgers the first man to cross the American continent in an aeroplane was killed here instantly late today when his biplane in which he had been soaring over the ocean fell from a height of 200 feet and buried him in the wreck His neck was broken and his body mangled by the engine of his machine Vin Fiz at NASM https airandspace si edu collection objects wright ex vin fiz Archived December 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine Aviator C P Rodgers Almost Instantly Killed His Biplane Falls Distance of 200 Feet Daily Times Chattanooga Tennessee April 4 1912 Thorpe John 2003 Fatalities and destroyed civil aircraft due to bird strikes 1912 2002 PDF International Bird Strike Committee IBSC 26 Warsaw Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2009 Retrieved May 22 2015 Enshrinee Cal Rodgers nationalaviation org National Aviation Hall of Fame Retrieved February 28 2023 Further reading edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Aviator C P Rodgers Almost Instantly Killed His Biplane Falls Distance of 200 Feet Eileen F Lebow Cal Rodgers and the Vin Fiz the First Transcontinental Flight Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press 1989 E P Stein Flight of the Vin Fiz New York Arbor House 1985 ISBN 0 87795 672 3 Richard L Taylor The First Flight Across the United States the Story of Calbraith Perry Rodgers and His Airplane the Vin Fiz New York F Watts 1993 Linn s Stamp News January 14 2002 p 14 New Vin Fiz Flyer card found and auctioned The New York Times Wednesday October 11 1911 Air Record Broken By Aviator Rodgers Exceeds Atwood s Cross Country Flight Of 1 265 Miles By Making 1 398 To Date Marshall Missouri October 10 1911 C P Rodgers the aviator who is trying to make a coast to coast flight landed at Marshall at 4 23 o clock this afternoon exceeding the world s record for cross country aeroplane flight by 133 miles The world record of 1 265 miles was made by Henry Atwood in a recent flight from St Louis to New York Rodgers has flown 1 398 miles according to railroad mileage External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Calbraith Perry Rodgers Calbraith Rodgers bibliography permanent dead link Early Aviators Calbraith Rodgers Smithsonian Vin Fiz Archived August 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Epic Flight of the Vin Fiz Flyer Calbraith Perry Rodgers Find a Grave Retrieved August 10 2010 Calbraith Rodgers background and details regarding his 1911 Vin Fiz flight Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Calbraith Perry Rodgers amp oldid 1209774468, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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