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Ernest Archdeacon

Ernest Archdeacon (23 March 1863 – 3 January 1950) was a French lawyer and aviation pioneer before the First World War. He made his first balloon flight at the age of 20. He commissioned a copy of the 1902 Wright No. 3 glider but had only limited success. He was regarded as France's foremost promoter and sponsor of aviation, offering prizes (Coupe d'Aviation Ernest Archdeacon and the Deutsch de la Meurthe-Archdeacon prize), commissioning designs, and organising tests and events.

Ernest Archdeacon
Archdeacon in the 1890s
Born(1863-03-23)23 March 1863
Paris, France
Died3 January 1950(1950-01-03) (aged 86)
Versailles, France
OccupationLawyer
OrganizationAéro-Club de France
Known forAviation pioneering

His most lasting contribution to aviation is the Aéro-Club de France, the oldest aero-club in the world, which he co-founded in 1898.[1] On 29 May 1908, Archdeacon became the first aeroplane passenger in Europe when he was piloted by Henry Farman at Ghent.

Early life

Archdeacon was born and raised in Paris, and studied law for a career at the bar. His passionate interest in science led him to also study ballooning and aviation, and in 1884, at age 20, he made his first balloon flight.

Motoring

Archdeacon was a keen sporting motorist, taking part in many of the main events of the period.

In 1894 he finished 17th in the world's first motor race, driving his Serpollet steamer from Paris to Rouen, covering the distance of 127 km (79 mi) in 13 hours.[2]

In 1896 he finished 7th in the Paris-Marseilles-Paris Trail driving a Delahaye. Covering the 1710 km in 75 hours 29 minutes 48 seconds. The event had 14 finishers from around 32 starters.[3]

In 1897 he finished 20th in the Paris-Dieppe Trail on 24 July driving a Delahaye. Covering the 170.8 km in 5 hours 41 minutes 15 seconds at an average speed of 30 kilometres per hour. The event had 43 finishers from over 45 starters.[4]

In 1899 he finished 8th in the Nice-Castellane-Nice race on 21 March driving a Delahaye, covering the 120.7 km in 3 hours 40 minutes.[5]

The Aero Club of France

On 20 October 1898, in partnership with the oil magnate Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe. Archdeacon founded the Aéro-Club de France, which is still the official authority of the organization of sports aviation in France. Other founding members included the Marquis de Fonvielle, Count Henri de la Vaulx and Count Henri de la Valette. The first president of the Aero Club in 1900 was the Marquis Jules-Albert de Dion.

In April 1900, the Aéro-Club de France announced the 'Deutsch de la Meurthe' prize of one hundred thousand francs for the first flying machine to complete the round trip from Saint-Cloud to the Eiffel Tower and back in less than thirty minutes. On 19 October 1901 Alberto Santos-Dumont won the prize in his airship No 6.

After learning about the Wright brothers glider flights from Octave Chanute's lecture to the Aero Club de France on 2 April 1903, Archdeacon decided to further encourage the development of aviation in France. He was encouraged to do this by the pioneer French aviator Captain Ferber, who had written to Archdeacon demanding "Do not let the aeroplane be achieved in America first." Archdeacon donated 3000 francs to the "Archdeacon committee!" of the Aéro-Club de France to sponsor aviation competitions.[6]

Gliders

In 1903, Archdeacon commissioned an imperfect copy of the 1902 Wright glider[7][8] from Monsieur Dargent at the military balloons and airships workshop at Chalais-Meudon.[9] It was a biplane with an ash framework covered with silk and braced with piano wire, and lacked the provision for lateral control that was the key to the success of the Wright Brothers' aircraft. It was described in La Vie au Grand Air:[10]

"The two wings, slightly convex from front to back, have a wingspan of 7.5 m (25 ft), a width of 1.4 m (4.6 ft) and are separated vertically by 0.4 m (1.3 ft). Total area: 22 square meters. ...It has two rudders: the horizontal rudder at the front for the vertical direction and preparing landing by gradually decreasing the speed; and the vertical rudder at the back for getting the direction in the horizontal plane (steering). The aéroplane is very robust despite weighing only 34 kilograms.

The first experiments with this glider were conducted in April 1904 on the dunes at Merlimont near Berck-sur-Mer, piloted by Gabriel Voisin and Captain Ferber.[9][11][12]

In March 1905, he commissioned a second glider from Voisin. In its unmanned first test, towed by a car, it broke apart in the air.[1][8]

A third glider, the Voisin-Archdeacon floatplane glider, was then commissioned from Voisin. This aircraft marked the introduction to European aviation of the Hargrave cell, based on Lawrence Hargrave's box-kites:[13] it was a three-bay biplane with side-curtains between the wings, a double-cell biplane tail and a forward elevator, and was fitted with a pair of floats. It was successfully tested on the River Seine at Boulogne-Billancourt using a boat to tow it between the bridges of Saint-Cloud and Sèvres. It rose to about 18 m (59 ft) above the Seine and flew about 610 m (2,000 ft), but was damaged in its next test and never flew again,[8] although further attempts were made on Lake Geneva in September.[14]

Heavier-than-air powered flight

In 1903 Ernest Archdeacon and the Aéro-Club de France announced the Coupe d'Aviation Ernest Archdeacon, a silver trophy for the first flight of more than twenty-five metres by a 'heavier-than-air' craft.[8] Later, the Aéro-Club de France offered a prize of 1500 francs to the first person to fly 100 m (330 ft).[8]

In October 1904, Ernest Archdeacon joined Deutsch de la Meurthe to offer a prize of 50,000 francs for the first heavier-than-air flight around a one kilometre closed circuit. The sum represented about 20 times the annual earnings of a Parisian professional worker.[15] Archdeacon and de la Meurthe understood that apart from the Wrights (see below), all heavier-than-air flights had been in a straight line. The prize was intended to encourage the development of an airplane that could turn, so the prize winner would have to fly a closed circuit.[16]

The 25 metre prize was won[17] by Alberto Santos-Dumont on 23 October 1906 at Bagatelle. He went on to win[17] the 100 metre prize on 12 November 1906. The 1 kilometre prize was won by Henri Farman on 13 January 1908, at Issy-les-Moulineaux.

Archdeacon Aéromotocyclette Anzani

 
Archdeacon's 'Aéro-Moto-Cyclette', September 1906

In 1906 Archdeacon commissioned a propeller-driven motorcycle, the Aéromotocyclette Anzani, which achieved a timed speed of 79.5 kilometres per hour at Achères-la-Forêt.[18][19] This aéromotocyclette, based on a 'Buchet' motorcycle,[20] was equipped with a 6-horsepower Anzani engine driving a propeller mounted on a 1.5 m (4.9 ft) steel tube.[19][18][20] There is no evidence that he applied for a patent.

Scepticism toward the Wright brothers

In November 1905 the Wright Brothers had written a letter to George Besançon, the editor of l'Aérophile describing their recent achievements in detail. The letter was published in the Paris sporting daily newspaper l'Auto on 30 November 1905, since Besançon was not able to publish it himself without delay.

This news polarized members of the Aero Club de France. A minority, including Besançon, Ferber and Henry Kapférer, believed the claims of the Wright Brothers, but the majority, led by Archdeacon, thought that they were false.

In 1906 the anti-Wright brothers sceptics in the European aviation community had converted the press. European newspapers, especially in France, were openly derisive, calling them bluffeurs (bluffers).[17] Archdeacon was publicly sceptical of the brothers' claims in spite of published reports; he wrote several articles and stated that "the French would make the first public demonstration of powered flight".[8]

On 10 February 1906 the Paris edition of the New York Herald summed up Europe's opinion of the Wright brothers in an editorial: "The Wrights have flown or they have not flown. They possess a machine or they do not possess one. They are in fact either fliers or liars. It is difficult to fly. It's easy to say, 'We have flown.'" [17]

In August 1908, after Wilbur Wright's demonstrations at Les Hunaudières race course near Le Mans, Archdeacon publicly admitted that he had done them an injustice.[8]

Aeroplane passenger

 
Archdeacon in Farman's Voisin Biplane in May 1908

Ernest Archdeacon is widely cited as the first aeroplane passenger in Europe when he was piloted by Henry Farman at Ghent on 29 May 1908.[21] The total flight was 1,241 m (4,072 ft).[22] Charles E. Vivian says he was preceded on 29 March by Leon Delagrange, who was also flown by Farman.[23]

Esperanto

Archdeacon also spoke Esperanto, which he learned in 1908. He wrote "Why I became an Esperanto speaker" (Pourquoi je suis devenu espérantiste, Paris: Fayard, 1910, 265p.), prefaced by Henri Farman. He was elected president of the Société Française pour la Propagation de l'Espéranto in 1925, and advocated that international language until the end of his life.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ctie-Monash, Hargrave, Archdeacon pioneer passenger
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 January 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  6. ^ La Vie au Grand Air, No. 280, January 21, 1904
  7. ^ Centennial of Flight, April. Archdeacon 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ a b c d e f g US Centennial of Flight, Ernest Archdeacon October 8, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b Ville de Meudon, Aviation, Archdeacon and Wright No 3
  10. ^ La Vie au Grand Air, No. 285, February 25, 1904
  11. ^ La Vie au Grand Air, No. 293, April 21, 1904.
  12. ^ Early Aviators, Profile and image of Capitaine L.F.Ferber
  13. ^ Gibbs-Smith, C. H. (1974). The Rebirth of European Aviation. London: HMSO. p. 159. ISBN 0-11290180-8.
  14. ^ Gibbs-Smith, p. 158.
  15. ^ Chadeau, Emmanuel, The aviation industry in France 1900-1950, Bleriot to Dassault, Paris, Fayard, 1987
  16. ^ Berget, Alphonse, The Conquest of the Air, 1909, London, Heinemann
  17. ^ a b c d Wright Brothers.org self-published research, "The Prize Patrol"
  18. ^ a b La Vie au Grand Air, No. 418, dated September 22, 1906
  19. ^ a b Collectif, Les Grands Dossiers de l'Illustration, L'épopée de l'Aviation, histoire d'un siècle 1843-1944, Sefag et l'Illustration, 1987
  20. ^ a b OzeBook, Top 100 motorcycles of the 20th Century, Image of standard 'chain-driven' 1903 Buchet without Archdeacon's experimental Anzani/propeller modifications.
  21. ^ Gibbs-Smith, C. H., The Rebirth of European Aviation: London, HMSO, 1974. ISBN 0 11290180 8, p. 254
  22. ^ Quid, Transports Aeriens, Avions, Dates/Milestones, First passenger in Europe
  23. ^ Vivian, E. Charles (2004). . [S.l.]: Kessinger Pub. pp. 134–135. ISBN 1-4191-0156-0. Archived from the original on 24 May 2014.

External links

  • The Pioneers - An Anthology Ernest Archdeacon (1863 - 1950)
  • OzeBook, Catalogue of Motorcycles, 1903 Buchet
Image gallery of Archdeacon projects
  • Archdeacon-Voisin Glider, c.1904
  • Archdeacon-Voisin Glider, c.1904. L'aéroplane Archdeacon, construit a Chalais-Meudon
  • Archdeacon-Voisin Glider, Issy les Moulineaux, March 1905
  • Archdeacon-Voisin Glider, Issy les Moulineaux, March 1905
  • Archdeacon-Voisin Glider, Issy les Moulineaux, March 1905, Towed by car with sand bag load
  • Henry Farman and Ernest Archdeacon, Issy-les-Moulineaux, 1908. On 29 May Farman took Archdeacon as 'the first air passenger in Europe'.

ernest, archdeacon, march, 1863, january, 1950, french, lawyer, aviation, pioneer, before, first, world, made, first, balloon, flight, commissioned, copy, 1902, wright, glider, only, limited, success, regarded, france, foremost, promoter, sponsor, aviation, of. Ernest Archdeacon 23 March 1863 3 January 1950 was a French lawyer and aviation pioneer before the First World War He made his first balloon flight at the age of 20 He commissioned a copy of the 1902 Wright No 3 glider but had only limited success He was regarded as France s foremost promoter and sponsor of aviation offering prizes Coupe d Aviation Ernest Archdeacon and the Deutsch de la Meurthe Archdeacon prize commissioning designs and organising tests and events Ernest ArchdeaconArchdeacon in the 1890sBorn 1863 03 23 23 March 1863Paris FranceDied3 January 1950 1950 01 03 aged 86 Versailles FranceOccupationLawyerOrganizationAero Club de FranceKnown forAviation pioneeringHis most lasting contribution to aviation is the Aero Club de France the oldest aero club in the world which he co founded in 1898 1 On 29 May 1908 Archdeacon became the first aeroplane passenger in Europe when he was piloted by Henry Farman at Ghent Contents 1 Early life 2 Motoring 3 The Aero Club of France 4 Sponsor of aviation 4 1 Gliders 4 2 Heavier than air powered flight 5 Archdeacon Aeromotocyclette Anzani 6 Scepticism toward the Wright brothers 7 Aeroplane passenger 8 Esperanto 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditArchdeacon was born and raised in Paris and studied law for a career at the bar His passionate interest in science led him to also study ballooning and aviation and in 1884 at age 20 he made his first balloon flight Motoring EditArchdeacon was a keen sporting motorist taking part in many of the main events of the period In 1894 he finished 17th in the world s first motor race driving his Serpollet steamer from Paris to Rouen covering the distance of 127 km 79 mi in 13 hours 2 In 1896 he finished 7th in the Paris Marseilles Paris Trail driving a Delahaye Covering the 1710 km in 75 hours 29 minutes 48 seconds The event had 14 finishers from around 32 starters 3 In 1897 he finished 20th in the Paris Dieppe Trail on 24 July driving a Delahaye Covering the 170 8 km in 5 hours 41 minutes 15 seconds at an average speed of 30 kilometres per hour The event had 43 finishers from over 45 starters 4 In 1899 he finished 8th in the Nice Castellane Nice race on 21 March driving a Delahaye covering the 120 7 km in 3 hours 40 minutes 5 The Aero Club of France EditOn 20 October 1898 in partnership with the oil magnate Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe Archdeacon founded the Aero Club de France which is still the official authority of the organization of sports aviation in France Other founding members included the Marquis de Fonvielle Count Henri de la Vaulx and Count Henri de la Valette The first president of the Aero Club in 1900 was the Marquis Jules Albert de Dion Sponsor of aviation EditIn April 1900 the Aero Club de France announced the Deutsch de la Meurthe prize of one hundred thousand francs for the first flying machine to complete the round trip from Saint Cloud to the Eiffel Tower and back in less than thirty minutes On 19 October 1901 Alberto Santos Dumont won the prize in his airship No 6 After learning about the Wright brothers glider flights from Octave Chanute s lecture to the Aero Club de France on 2 April 1903 Archdeacon decided to further encourage the development of aviation in France He was encouraged to do this by the pioneer French aviator Captain Ferber who had written to Archdeacon demanding Do not let the aeroplane be achieved in America first Archdeacon donated 3000 francs to the Archdeacon committee of the Aero Club de France to sponsor aviation competitions 6 Gliders Edit In 1903 Archdeacon commissioned an imperfect copy of the 1902 Wright glider 7 8 from Monsieur Dargent at the military balloons and airships workshop at Chalais Meudon 9 It was a biplane with an ash framework covered with silk and braced with piano wire and lacked the provision for lateral control that was the key to the success of the Wright Brothers aircraft It was described in La Vie au Grand Air 10 The two wings slightly convex from front to back have a wingspan of 7 5 m 25 ft a width of 1 4 m 4 6 ft and are separated vertically by 0 4 m 1 3 ft Total area 22 square meters It has two rudders the horizontal rudder at the front for the vertical direction and preparing landing by gradually decreasing the speed and the vertical rudder at the back for getting the direction in the horizontal plane steering The aeroplane is very robust despite weighing only 34 kilograms The first experiments with this glider were conducted in April 1904 on the dunes at Merlimont near Berck sur Mer piloted by Gabriel Voisin and Captain Ferber 9 11 12 In March 1905 he commissioned a second glider from Voisin In its unmanned first test towed by a car it broke apart in the air 1 8 A third glider the Voisin Archdeacon floatplane glider was then commissioned from Voisin This aircraft marked the introduction to European aviation of the Hargrave cell based on Lawrence Hargrave s box kites 13 it was a three bay biplane with side curtains between the wings a double cell biplane tail and a forward elevator and was fitted with a pair of floats It was successfully tested on the River Seine at Boulogne Billancourt using a boat to tow it between the bridges of Saint Cloud and Sevres It rose to about 18 m 59 ft above the Seine and flew about 610 m 2 000 ft but was damaged in its next test and never flew again 8 although further attempts were made on Lake Geneva in September 14 Heavier than air powered flight Edit In 1903 Ernest Archdeacon and the Aero Club de France announced the Coupe d Aviation Ernest Archdeacon a silver trophy for the first flight of more than twenty five metres by a heavier than air craft 8 Later the Aero Club de France offered a prize of 1500 francs to the first person to fly 100 m 330 ft 8 In October 1904 Ernest Archdeacon joined Deutsch de la Meurthe to offer a prize of 50 000 francs for the first heavier than air flight around a one kilometre closed circuit The sum represented about 20 times the annual earnings of a Parisian professional worker 15 Archdeacon and de la Meurthe understood that apart from the Wrights see below all heavier than air flights had been in a straight line The prize was intended to encourage the development of an airplane that could turn so the prize winner would have to fly a closed circuit 16 The 25 metre prize was won 17 by Alberto Santos Dumont on 23 October 1906 at Bagatelle He went on to win 17 the 100 metre prize on 12 November 1906 The 1 kilometre prize was won by Henri Farman on 13 January 1908 at Issy les Moulineaux Archdeacon Aeromotocyclette Anzani Edit Archdeacon s Aero Moto Cyclette September 1906 In 1906 Archdeacon commissioned a propeller driven motorcycle the Aeromotocyclette Anzani which achieved a timed speed of 79 5 kilometres per hour at Acheres la Foret 18 19 This aeromotocyclette based on a Buchet motorcycle 20 was equipped with a 6 horsepower Anzani engine driving a propeller mounted on a 1 5 m 4 9 ft steel tube 19 18 20 There is no evidence that he applied for a patent Scepticism toward the Wright brothers EditIn November 1905 the Wright Brothers had written a letter to George Besancon the editor of l Aerophile describing their recent achievements in detail The letter was published in the Paris sporting daily newspaper l Auto on 30 November 1905 since Besancon was not able to publish it himself without delay This news polarized members of the Aero Club de France A minority including Besancon Ferber and Henry Kapferer believed the claims of the Wright Brothers but the majority led by Archdeacon thought that they were false In 1906 the anti Wright brothers sceptics in the European aviation community had converted the press European newspapers especially in France were openly derisive calling them bluffeurs bluffers 17 Archdeacon was publicly sceptical of the brothers claims in spite of published reports he wrote several articles and stated that the French would make the first public demonstration of powered flight 8 On 10 February 1906 the Paris edition of the New York Herald summed up Europe s opinion of the Wright brothers in an editorial The Wrights have flown or they have not flown They possess a machine or they do not possess one They are in fact either fliers or liars It is difficult to fly It s easy to say We have flown 17 In August 1908 after Wilbur Wright s demonstrations at Les Hunaudieres race course near Le Mans Archdeacon publicly admitted that he had done them an injustice 8 Aeroplane passenger Edit Archdeacon in Farman s Voisin Biplane in May 1908 Ernest Archdeacon is widely cited as the first aeroplane passenger in Europe when he was piloted by Henry Farman at Ghent on 29 May 1908 21 The total flight was 1 241 m 4 072 ft 22 Charles E Vivian says he was preceded on 29 March by Leon Delagrange who was also flown by Farman 23 Esperanto EditArchdeacon also spoke Esperanto which he learned in 1908 He wrote Why I became an Esperanto speaker Pourquoi je suis devenu esperantiste Paris Fayard 1910 265p prefaced by Henri Farman He was elected president of the Societe Francaise pour la Propagation de l Esperanto in 1925 and advocated that international language until the end of his life See also EditAviation history List of firsts in aviation Timeline of aviation 19th century Timeline of aviation 20th centuryReferences Edit a b Ctie Monash Hargrave Archdeacon pioneer passenger TeamDan Motoring Results Archive 1894 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 25 January 2013 TeamDan Motoring Results Archive 1896 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 25 January 2013 TeamDan Motoring Results Archive 1897 Archived from the original on 6 January 2017 Retrieved 28 April 2012 TeamDan Motoring Results Archive 1899 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2012 La Vie au Grand Air No 280 January 21 1904 Centennial of Flight April Archdeacon Archived 2012 10 07 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g US Centennial of Flight Ernest Archdeacon Archived October 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Ville de Meudon Aviation Archdeacon and Wright No 3 La Vie au Grand Air No 285 February 25 1904 La Vie au Grand Air No 293 April 21 1904 Early Aviators Profile and image of Capitaine L F Ferber Gibbs Smith C H 1974 The Rebirth of European Aviation London HMSO p 159 ISBN 0 11290180 8 Gibbs Smith p 158 Chadeau Emmanuel The aviation industry in France 1900 1950 Bleriot to Dassault Paris Fayard 1987 Berget Alphonse The Conquest of the Air 1909 London Heinemann a b c d Wright Brothers org self published research The Prize Patrol a b La Vie au Grand Air No 418 dated September 22 1906 a b Collectif Les Grands Dossiers de l Illustration L epopee de l Aviation histoire d un siecle 1843 1944 Sefag et l Illustration 1987 a b OzeBook Top 100 motorcycles of the 20th Century Image of standard chain driven 1903 Buchet without Archdeacon s experimental Anzani propeller modifications Gibbs Smith C H The Rebirth of European Aviation London HMSO 1974 ISBN 0 11290180 8 p 254 Quid Transports Aeriens Avions Dates Milestones First passenger in Europe Vivian E Charles 2004 A history of aeronautics S l Kessinger Pub pp 134 135 ISBN 1 4191 0156 0 Archived from the original on 24 May 2014 External links EditThe Pioneers An Anthology Ernest Archdeacon 1863 1950 OzeBook Catalogue of Motorcycles 1903 BuchetImage gallery of Archdeacon projectsArchdeacon Voisin Glider c 1904 Archdeacon Voisin Glider c 1904 L aeroplane Archdeacon construit a Chalais Meudon Archdeacon Voisin Glider Issy les Moulineaux March 1905 Archdeacon Voisin Glider Issy les Moulineaux March 1905 Archdeacon Voisin Glider Issy les Moulineaux March 1905 Towed by car with sand bag load Henry Farman and Ernest Archdeacon Issy les Moulineaux 1908 On 29 May Farman took Archdeacon as the first air passenger in Europe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernest Archdeacon amp oldid 1101556467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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