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John Joseph Montgomery

John Joseph Montgomery (February 15, 1858 – October 31, 1911) was an American inventor, physicist, engineer, and professor at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California, who is best known for his invention of controlled heavier-than-air flying machines.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

John Joseph Montgomery
Born(1858-02-15)February 15, 1858
DiedOctober 31, 1911(1911-10-31) (aged 53)
Cause of deathGliding accident
Resting placeColma, California
37°40′16″N 122°26′43″W / 37.671155°N 122.445191°W / 37.671155; -122.445191
NationalityAmerican
EducationSt. Ignatius College (BA, MS)
Occupation(s)aviation pioneer, inventor, professor of physics, physicist
SpouseRegina Cleary (m. 1910)
Signature

In the 1880s Montgomery, a native of Yuba City, California, made manned flight experiments in a series of gliders in the United States in Otay Mesa near San Diego, California.[8][9][7][10][11][12] Although not publicized in the 1880s, these early flights were first described by Montgomery as part of a lecture delivered at the International Conference on Aerial Navigation at Chicago, 1893.[13][14] These independent advances came after gliding flights by European pioneers such as George Cayley's coachman in England (1853) and Jean-Marie Le Bris in France (1856).[15] Although Montgomery never claimed firsts, his gliding experiments of the 1880s are considered by some historians and organizations to have been the first controlled flights of a heavier-than-air flying machine in America[16][14][17] or in the Western Hemisphere,[18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25] depending on the source.

Montgomery devised different control methods for his gliders, including weight shifting for roll and an elevator for pitch (1884). Subsequent designs used hinged, pilot-operated trailing edge flaps on the wings (1885–1886) for roll control,[26][27][28][29][9][30] and later, full wing warping systems for roll (1903–1905)[31][32] and for both pitch and roll (1911).[33]

Education edit

Montgomery attended St. Ignatius High School, graduating in 1873. At age 16 he attended the preparatory division at Santa Clara College from 1874 to 1876 to prepare for college.[34]

Montgomery attended St. Ignatius College, now known as the University of San Francisco. Here, he studied under Fathers Joseph Bayma, S.J., and Joseph Neri, S.J., two gifted and influential educators.[34] As a student in San Francisco, Montgomery must have mentioned his desire to build a flying machine, according to Fogel and Harwood.[34] They include an observation in their book, made by Montgomery's contemporary, Rev. Fred Morrison, S.J.: “In those days anyone who even mentioned ‘man being able to fly’ was considered a little bit off.[34] So, when John was in the vicinity, there was a general tapping of heads, which in our present day would be the sign that the party was crazy.”[34] At St. Ignatius College, Montgomery received a Bachelor of Arts in physics in 1879 and a master's degree in physics in 1880.[34] He also received an honorary PhD in physics from Santa Clara University in 1901.[34]

Ornithology edit

In the early 1880s Montgomery began studying the anatomy of a variety of large soaring birds to determine their basic characteristics like wing area, weight and curved surfaces. He made detailed observations of birds in flight, especially large soaring birds such as eagles, hawks, vultures and pelicans which soared on thermals near San Diego Bay.[35]

He initially attempted to achieve manned flight with ornithopters. In 1883, he built and experimented with a series of three ornithopters but found that human strength was insufficient to generate the necessary lift. He abandoned flapping-wing flight, preferring instead to emulate soaring birds with fixed-wing craft. He reasoned that it would be possible to solve the physics of gliding and soaring flight and then add a motor.[36]

Fixed-wing gliders edit

Montgomery first tested his concepts for the design, construction and control of gliders with small-scale, free flight models. His first glider in 1883-84 had a cambered airfoil based on the curve of the seagull wing. Pitch was controlled by an operable elevator and roll was controlled by pilot weight shift. Yaw was uncontrolled. This aircraft design served as the basis for three gliders over the period 1883–1886. In the spring of 1884, Montgomery made flights of up to 600 feet (180 m)[29] from the rim of Otay Mesa.[9][37] During experiments with this craft, Montgomery found that the glider would not respond well to side gusts. He returned to ornithology and noted how turkey vultures had significant dihedral and twisted their wings as a form of lateral balance.[9]

Emulating these control methods, in 1884-1885 he incorporated hinged flaps into the trailing edge of a second glider. These were held under spring tension for automatic balance in gusts, but were also connected through cables to the pilot's seat so they could be operated mechanically by the pilot for roll control.[9][38] In essence these flaps were early ailerons.[29][39] The second glider had a flat plate airfoil, considerable dihedral for stability and an operable elevator for pitch control. Montgomery devised an inclined rail system so the piloted glider could roll from the top of a hill and attain flight speed.

In the winter of 1885–86, Montgomery constructed a third glider. It had a cambered airfoil modeled after the wings of a vulture, though the leading and trailing edges were turned upward slightly. The wing, spanwise, was "gull" shaped. Controls allowed the pilot to vary the angle of incidence of the left and right wing either in unison or independently. Dihedral and an operable elevator were also included.[9] Montgomery concluded that a better understanding of aerodynamics was needed for the design of a proper airfoil.

In an 1893 speech, Montgomery said that flights were made in these three craft during the period 1884–1886, with the occasional assistance of at least three friends and two younger brothers.[40] Of the flight trials with the second craft (of 1885) Octave Chanute's account in 1893 noted "several trials were made, but no effective lift could be obtained." Of the third craft (of 1886) Chanute wrote "this last apparatus proved an entire failure, as no effective lifting effect could be obtained from the wind sufficient to carry the 180 lbs. it was designed to bear.""[41]

Montgomery's own account made clear that he considered the technology of the second and third gliders of 1885 and 1886 as effective, but the airfoil designs were a disappointment in terms of lift-generation as they produced much shorter gliding flights in comparison to the first craft of 1884. He realized he was getting increasingly farther from understanding the mechanism of lift and began controlled laboratory experiments to investigate airfoils. In 1886, he briefly considered filing a patent caveat for lateral balancing, but did not.[10]

Aerodynamics edit

About 1885 Montgomery began a long series of experiments with a whirling arm device, a smoke chamber, a water current table and large wooden surfaces angled into the wind in order to understand the physics of flow around curved surfaces.[42] He also used dried bird wings placed in wind currents to observe the effect. His work in the 1880s confirmed that mechanical systems used by a pilot could preserve lateral balance and some degree of equilibrium in gliding flight. His experiments also confirmed the value of a cambered surface for obtaining lift.[43]

In 1893 Montgomery visited the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, intending initially to attend a lecture by electrical expert Nikola Tesla. Upon arrival, he heard of the International Conference on Aerial Navigation to take place the first week of August. He introduced himself to Octave Chanute and Albert F. Zahm, who were collaborating in chairing the conference. He did not present a paper, but was subsequently invited by Chanute and Zahm to participate in the conference by giving two lectures of his own. His first focused on his experiments with surfaces in air and water currents. This talk was revised into an article and included in the conference proceedings.[44] The article was later published in the July 1894 edition of Aeronautics. With encouragement from Chanute, Montgomery decided to give a second lecture. Although he refrained from providing enough detail that might be useful to designers, he did discuss use of hinged wing sections for lateral control.[13] His second lecture was not published as part of the conference proceedings, because Chanute thought Montgomery wanted to seek patent protection. Instead, Chanute presented his own comments on Montgomery's flight experiments in his article series Progress in Flying Machines, which was published serially in the American Engineer and Railroad Journal in 1893, and in the following year as a book of the same name. Montgomery reprised his second lecture in a talk to the Aeronautical Society of New York in 1910, and the contents were later published in several journals and books.[9]

From 1893 to 1895, while teaching at Mount St. Joseph's College in Rohnerville, California,[45] Montgomery conducted further experiments into the physics of flow over a wing and lift generation using a smoke chamber and water table. From these experiments he developed a theory of lift based on vorticity, or what modern aerodynamicists refer to as a "circulation theory" or "lifting-line theory".[10][46] Montgomery compiled his results into a 131-page manuscript titled Soaring Flight[47] and attempted to have it published by Matthias N. Forney and the editors of Scientific American with the help of Octave Chanute.[48] Chanute was reluctant to endorse it due to his disagreements with some of its theoretical content and suggested that it be edited to distinguish between experimental results and theoretical inferences.[49] Scientific American rejected the manuscript, but later published an abstract. Chanute also directed one of his collaborators, Augustus Herring, to study the manuscript, as he considered it instructive in understanding "ground effect."[50]

Invention edit

In 1884 Montgomery received a patent for a process to vulcanize and de-vulcanize India rubber. In 1895 and again in the period 1901 to 1904, Montgomery occasionally supplemented his aeronautical research with work in other branches of science, including electricity, communication, astronomy and mining. In 1895 he received four patents (American, German, British, and Canadian) for improvements in the efficiency of petroleum burning furnaces. In 1897 he took a teaching position at Santa Clara College and directed study of wireless telegraphy with Father Richard Bell. They were first to successfully transmit messages from Santa Clara College to San Francisco.[51] Montgomery also patented two gold concentrator devices to assist miners in extracting gold from beach sands (see patent list).

Tandem-wing gliders edit

In early 1903, veteran balloonist Thomas Scott Baldwin sought Montgomery's knowledge of aeronautics. Baldwin had also been assisting August Greth in constructing and experimenting with an airship (dubbed the California Eagle) at San Jose, California.[52] Baldwin wanted improved propeller designs for dirigibles. He stopped working with Greth and came to Santa Clara College for an extended period to learn aeronautics from Montgomery. Their work together included wind tunnel tests at the college.[53][54][55] At Baldwin's suggestion, they entered into a business arrangement in 1904 to make public exhibitions with manned Montgomery gliders launched at high altitudes from unmanned Baldwin balloons.[56] By late May 1904, Montgomery made test flights with a new glider.[57][58] However, Baldwin abandoned their collaboration and instead constructed his own airship (the California Arrow) at San Jose incorporating Montgomery's propeller design and a 7-horsepower motorcycle engine (the Hercules of G.H. Curtiss Mfg Co.). The California Arrow would be first in America to make repeated circuits under control.[55][59][60][61] During a protracted period of acrimony between Montgomery and Baldwin, Baldwin entered the California Arrow in the aeronautic competition at the St. Louis World's Fair in November, 1904 and took first place.[62][63][64]

 
John J. Montgomery and his tandem-wing glider The Santa Clara on 29 April 1905

In the fall of 1904 Montgomery conducted tests of his tandem-wing glider, the Montgomery Aeroplane, with associates Frank Hamilton and Daniel J. Maloney. On March 16, 17 and 20, 1905, in Aptos, California, Daniel Maloney made several successful flights in the glider at Leonard's ranch (Rancho San Antonio, now known as Seascape), after releasing from a hot-air balloon at high altitude. The resulting glides were well-controlled, and flights lasted up to 13 minutes.[65][66] News of these flights received attention in both the U.S. and Europe.[67][68][69][70][71][72][73] After this success, Montgomery gave a press conference to provide for the first time a history of his efforts in aeronautics and announced a patent application for his aeroplane and methods of wing warping.[74] On April 29, 1905, Montgomery, Maloney, and Hamilton provided a public demonstration of the Montgomery Aeroplane, rechristened that day as The Santa Clara in honor of Santa Clara College. In view of hundreds of spectators and members of the press, Maloney released from the balloon at an approximate altitude of 4,000 feet above Santa Clara College. Maloney performed a series of pre-determined maneuvers and made a soft landing near the college grounds.[75][76][77] This exhibition brought widespread recognition for Montgomery and was generally accepted as a milestone in aviation.[6][78][79][80][81][82][83][14][84] In the following months Montgomery and Maloney made many exhibitions with The Santa Clara and another tandem wing glider The California in the San Francisco bay area. On July 18, 1905, Maloney was killed when a rope from the balloon damaged the glider during the ascent, causing structural failure after release. Despite this, Montgomery continued experiments with other tandem-wing gliders and pilots for some time.

Evergreen edit

 
John J. Montgomery landing The Evergreen monoplane glider in October, 1911.

Following the catastrophic 1906 San Francisco earthquake, Montgomery's gliding experiments were curtailed until 1911. Montgomery began experimenting with a new control system in which pitch and roll of the glider were managed by wing warping, while the tail assembly was fixed. Montgomery intended to add a motor and apply for a patent. This glider, The Evergreen (named after the Evergreen district of San Jose, California where flight tests occurred), was flown by Montgomery as well as another aeronaut Reinhardt more than 50 times in October 1911.

Death edit

On October 31, 1911, Montgomery was attempting to land Evergreen at low speed and encountered turbulence, which caused a stall. He crashed and died from his injuries at the site. The hillside (now known as "Montgomery Hill") is just behind Evergreen Valley College. John J. Montgomery was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma, California on November 3, 1911.

Organizational memberships edit

  • The Pacific Aero Club (1909), founding member.[85]
  • The Aero Club of Illinois (1910).[86]
  • The Aeronautical Society of New York (1910), elected honorary member "in recognition of his manifold labors to advance the art of aviation."[39]
  • The Aeronautical Society (1911), as invited member of the Research Committee of the Technical Board[87][88] and Organization and Convention Committee.[89]
  • The Santa Clara Valley Aero Club (1911), first Vice President.[90]

Gallant Journey edit

In 1946, Columbia Pictures released Gallant Journey, a full-length movie[91] based on John J. Montgomery's life and work. The film was directed by William A. Wellman, and starred Glenn Ford as Montgomery, Janet Blair as his wife Regina (née Cleary), whom he had married in 1910, and Charles Ruggles. The stunt pilots for the film were Paul Mantz,[92] Paul Tuntland[93][94] and Don Stevens. The film included several different historical reenactments of Montgomery's glider flights.[95] Gallant Journey premiered in San Diego, California on September 2, 1946, and had its full national release September 24, 1946. As part of the publicity for the movie, Columbia Pictures sponsored a cross-country Boston to Los Angeles tour featuring a 1911 vintage auto, the same vintage as Montgomery's last flight. William Wellman had served previously in the U.S. Army Air Corps and was stationed as an officer at Rockwell Field, San Diego, California and Glenn Ford had also served in San Diego during World War II.

Recognition edit

Historical landmarks edit

 
The plaque placed at Montgomery Grove. It was relocated from Evergreen Valley College's campus to the current site.

Two California Historical Landmarks are associated with Montgomery:

  • Montgomery Memorial, Otay Mesa.[96][97] The Montgomery Memorial was dedicated on May 21, 1950, and features a silver static test wing panel for the Consolidated B-32 Dominator mounted upright that is visible for miles.[98] It is also associated with a recreation center near the location of his first glides (Montgomery-Waller Recreation Center, San Diego, California[99]). The memorial was designed by pioneering modernist Lloyd Ruocco.[100]
  • Montgomery Hill, San Jose[101] near Evergreen Valley College. Evergreen Valley College also honors his memory with a green space (Montgomery Grove), a lecture hall (Montgomery Hall), and an observatory (Montgomery Hill Observatory). On March 15, 2008, a sculpture was unveiled at San Felipe and Yerba Buena roads in San Jose, California as a tribute to Montgomery. The 30-foot-tall steel structure of a glider wing was placed on a 32-foot-diameter plaza (later designated Montgomery Plaza) designed by San Francisco artist Kent Roberts.[102]

Airports and aviation clubs edit

In 1919, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors changed the name of the Marina Flying Field just east of Crissy Field to "Montgomery Field."[103] From 1920 to 1944 Montgomery Field served as an airmail facility. This field still exists along the Embarcadero as Marina Green.

On May 20, 1950, Montgomery Field (KMYF) in San Diego, California, one of the busiest general aviation airports in the world, was named in his honor.[98]

 
Dedication plaque for Montgomery Field, San Diego

Civil Air Patrol Squadron 36 in San Jose, California is named the "John J. Montgomery Memorial Cadet Squadron 36" in his honor.[104] Their motto is "Exceed the Challenge." Experimental Aircraft Association Chapter 338 in San Jose, California is also named in honor of Montgomery.[105]

Schools edit

 
Silver Wing monument at Montgomery-Waller Recreation Center in Otay Mesa, San Diego, California

Other recognition edit

 
A marker placed at Aptos, California where Montgomery's tandem-wing glider was flown in March 1905 for the first high-altitude flights in the world.

John J. Montgomery was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1964, U.S. Soaring Hall of Fame in 2001,[111] California Aviation Hall of Fame in 2015.,[112] and International Aerospace Hall of Fame in 2017.[113]

In 1924, a new engineering building was dedicated as the Montgomery Laboratories on the campus of Santa Clara University. This laboratory was located where Mayer Theatre is today.[114] A celebration was held March 18, 1934 at Santa Clara University to mark the 50th anniversary of Montgomery's first glider flight.[115] Also on the campus of Santa Clara University, an obelisk was dedicated by the citizens of Santa Clara, California to Montgomery on April 29, 1946, at the location of Maloney's 1905 glider flights.[116]

In 1949, a section of what is now part of the Interstate 5 freeway that passes through the former site of the Montgomery 1880s Fruitland Ranch and goes from the Mexican border to downtown San Diego, California was named the John J. Montgomery Freeway.[117][118]

In the 1960s, the National Society of Aerospace Professionals and the San Diego Aerospace Museum established a John J. Montgomery Award for aerospace excellence. Members of the X-15, Mercury, and Polaris programs received the award, including astronauts such as Neil Armstrong.

On May 11, 1996, Montgomery's 1883 glider was recognized as an International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.[119]

On March 19, 2005, John J. Montgomery was the focus of a Centennial Celebration of Soaring Flight, held in Aptos, California at the location of some of his early glider experiments. At this celebration, a marker was placed in Aptos in honor of the first manned high−altitude flights.[120]

 
Replica of The Evergreen at the Hiller Aviation Museum

On April 5, 2008, a celebration of the 125th anniversary of John Montgomery's first glide took place at the Hiller Aviation Museum in San Carlos, California.[121]

In May 2016, the San Diego Air & Space Museum established a new exhibit for John J. Montgomery in their main rotunda, including The Evergreen glider from 1911 and Montgomery's original Soaring Flight manuscript from 1896.[122] In 2017, Montgomery was inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame at the Museum.[123]

In June 2023, a replica of The Santa Clara glider was installed in the lobby of Crownair Aviation at Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport in San Diego. The glider is on loan from the San Diego Air and Space Museum.[124]

See also edit

Publications edit

 
The Evergreen glider restored by the Smithsonian Institution on display at the San Diego Air & Space Museum
  • Montgomery, John J. Discussions on the Various Papers on Soaring Flight Proceedings of the International Conference on Aerial Navigation, Chicago, Aug. 1–4. 1893 pp. 246–249.
  • Montgomery, John J. Soaring Flight, manuscript, 1895 (under flickr.com)
  • Montgomery, John J. The Mechanics Involved in a Bird's Wing in Soaring and Their Relation to Aeronautics, Address to the Southern California Academy of Sciences, Los Angeles, Nov. 9, 1897.
  • Montgomery, John J. The Aeroplane, The Aeroplane Advertising Co., Santa Clara, California, 1905.
  • Montgomery, John J. "New Principles in Aerial Flight", Scientific American, November 25, 1905.
  • Montgomery, John J. Principles Involved in the Formation of Winged Surfaces and the Phenomenon of Soaring, presented at the Aeronautics Congress, New York, Oct. 28–29, 1907. Published as a series in Aeronautics Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 30–33, October, 1908; Vol. 3, No. 5, pp. 34–40, November, 1908; Vol. 3, No. 6, pp. 32–36, December, 1908; Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 43–46.
  • Montgomery, John J. "Some Early Gliding Experiments in America", Aeronautics, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1909, pp. 47–50.
  • Montgomery, John J. "The Origin of Wing Warping: Professor Montgomery's Experiments", Aeronautics (London), Vol. 3, No. 6, 1910, pp. 63–64.
  • Montgomery, John J. "Our Tutors in the Art of Flying", Aeronautics, September 22, 1915, pp. 99–100 (article printed posthumously).

Patents edit

  1. U.S. patent 0,308,189 - Devulcanizing and restoring vulcanized rubber - 1884 November 18
  2. U.S. patent 0,549,679 - Petroleum burner - 1895 November 12
  3. British Patent 21477 - Petroleum burner and furnace - 1895 November 12
  4. German Patent 88977 - Petroleum oven - 1895 November 12
  5. Canadian Patent 50585 - Petroleum burner - 1895 November 14
  6. Canadian Patent 70319 - Concentrator - 1901 February 19
  7. U.S. patent 0,679,155 - Concentrator - 1901 July 23
  8. U.S. patent 0,742,889 - Concentrator - 1903 November 3
  9. U.S. patent 0,831,173 - Aeroplane - 1906 September 18
  10. U.S. patent 0,974,171 - Rectifying electric currents - 1910 November 1
  11. U.S. patent 0,974,415 - Process for compelling electric motors to keep in step with the waves or impulses of the current driving them, and a motor embodying the process - 1910 November 1

References edit

  1. ^ Tandy, Edward T. (1910). An Epitome of the Work of the Aeronautic Society from July, 1908 to December, 1909. New York, NY: Aeronautic Society of New York.
  2. ^ Peyrey, François (1909). Les Oiseaux Artificiels. Paris, France: Derlis Fréres.
  3. ^ "An American Pioneer of Soaring Flight: John J. Montgomery". Aviation. 4 (1): 302–303. 1918.
  4. ^ Walker, Thomas (1910). The Art of Flying. London, England: King, Sell & Olding.
  5. ^ Turner, Charles C. (1910). Aerial Navigation of To-day: A Popular Account of the Evolution of Aeronautics. London, England: Seeley & Co.
  6. ^ a b Colwell, J.H. (1920). "The Origin and Development of Aeronautics". Journal of the Patent Office Society. 3: 12.
  7. ^ a b Hunt, Rockwell D. (1932). "John J. Montgomery". California and Californians. 3 (126): 27.
  8. ^ The Montgomery Evergreen April 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Montgomery, John J. (April 21, 1910). The Origin of Wing Warping (Speech). Aeronautic Society of New York.(Aeronautics 1910)
  10. ^ a b c Harwood, Craig; Fogel, Gary (2012). Quest for Flight: John J. Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806142647.
  11. ^ Berriman, Algernon E. Aviation. An Introduction to the Elements of Flight, Methuen & Co., London, 1912. pp. 213-214.
  12. ^ "Montgomery's Gliding Experiments", in Hayward, Charles B. Practical Aeronautics: An Understandable Presentation of Interesting and Essential Facts in Aeronautical Science.' Chicago: American School of Correspondence, 1912.
  13. ^ a b Zahm, Albert F. (1923) "Catholic Contributions in the Field of Aeronautics" in Benson, William Shepherd, James J. Walsh, Edward J. Hanna, and Constantine E. McGuire. Catholic Builders of the Nation: A Symposium on the Catholic Contribution to the Civilization of the United States. Boston: Continental Press.
  14. ^ a b c Pritchard, John Lawrence (1929). The Book of The Aeroplane. The University of Michigan: Longmans Green & Company. p. 17.
  15. ^ The Journal of San Diego History, July 1968, Vol. 14, No. 3.
  16. ^ National Cyclopedia of American Biography: Being the History of the United States as Illustrated in the Lives of the Founders, Builders, & Defenders of the Republic, etc..., Edited by Distinguished Biographers, James T. White & Co. Volume XVI, 1916.
  17. ^ Mark D. Ardema and Joseph Mach, Santa Clara University School of Engineering, and William J. Adams, Jr., "John Joseph Montgomery, 1883 Glider: An International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark, Designated by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, May 11, 1996, at Hiller Aircraft Museum and Santa Clara University" (brochure, 11 pp.)
  18. ^ "Montgomery First to Conquer the Air: Austrian Officials after Inquiry Give Palm to California Inventor," San Francisco Examiner, May 16, 1909. See also "Conquering the Air," San Francisco Monitor, June 12, 1909.
  19. ^ Jacobs, James W. "John Joseph Montgomery." In James W. Jacobs, Enshrinee Album: The First Twenty-One Years, 134⟨n⟩35. Dayton, Ohio: National Aviation Hall of Fame, 1984.
  20. ^ McCormick, Barnes (2004). Aerospace Engineering Education During the First Century of Flight. Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. ISBN 9781563477102.
  21. ^ L'Écho Des Ailes: Revue Indépendante pour la Défense des Intérêts Aéronautiques, Vol. 17, No. 2, January 23, 1948. By Fédération des Clubs Belges d'Aviation de Tourisme, Brussels, Belgium.
  22. ^ "Flug-Revue" ("Flight Review"), 1968, Vereinigte Motor-Verlage, p. 155.
  23. ^ Hearings, Reports and Prints of the House Committee on Science and Astronautics, United States Congress. House Committee on Science and Astronautics, U.S. Govt. Printing Office, Washington D.C., 1972.
  24. ^ Histoire de l'Aéronautique et de l'Espace, 2001.
  25. ^ Davy, Maurice J.B. (1935) Aeronautics, Science Museum.
  26. ^ "Professor Montgomery's Experiments". Aeronautics (London). 3 (6): 73, 111. 1910.
  27. ^ "Machine with Wings Upsets Theories," "Years of Research Applied to Solving the Problem," San Jose Mercury Evening News, March 31, 1905.
  28. ^ "Third Tests Are All Successful," San Francisco Bulletin, March 26, 1905.
  29. ^ a b c Montgomery, John J. (1909). "Some Early Gliding Experiments In America". Aeronautics (New York). 4 (1).
  30. ^ Hayward, Charles B. (ed.) (1912) Practical Aeronautics, American School of Correspondence, Chicago.(Introduction written by Orville Wright)
  31. ^ "The Origin of Warping: Professor Montgomery's Experiments". Aeronautics. 3 (6). London: 63–64.
  32. ^ Chanute, Octave. (1907) "Montgomery." In: Pocket-Book of Aeronautics, edited by Hermann. W. L. Moedebeck, translated by W. Mansergh Varley, Vol. 309, No. 10. London: Whittaker and Co.
  33. ^ Campi, Richard B. (1961) "Description and Analysis of the 1911 Montgomery Controllable Man Carrying Glider." Working paper, December 29, 1961.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g "The Great Jewel of Education: 1880-1905 - St. Ignatius College Prep". www.siprep.org. Retrieved November 2, 2022.
  35. ^ Montgomery, John (1910). "Our Tutors in the Art of Flying". Aeronautics (London): 99–100.
  36. ^ Kavanagh, Dennis K. (1905). The Aeroplane. Santa Clara, California: The Aeroplane Advertising Company.
  37. ^ Montgomery, James P., direct testimony in response to Q. 16, Jan. 13, 1919, Regina C. Montgomery et al. v. the United States - Equity No. 33852.
  38. ^ Montgomery, Richard J. Direct Testimony in Court (Equity No. 33852) on January 13, 1919.
  39. ^ a b "Montgomery Hits Wright's Patent: California College Professor Claims He Invented Warped Wings Back in 1885," New York World, April 24, 1910.
  40. ^ United States. n.d. Court of Claims of the United States. No. 33852. Regina Cleary Montgomery, heir, and Richard J. Montgomery, Mary C. Montgomery, Margaret H. Montgomery, and Jane E. Montgomery, assignees of Ellen Montgomery heir of John J. Montgomery, deceased, v. the United States." Testimony provided in direct and cross examination by Charles T. Couts, Charles Burroughs, James P. Montgomery, Richard J. Montgomery, Mary F. McCarthy, January 1919."
  41. ^ Chanute, Octave. (1893) Progress in Flying Machines, The American Engineer and Railroad Journal, Dec 1893.
  42. ^ Montgomery, John J. (1894) "Discussion of the Various Papers on Soaring Flight," Proceedings of the Conference on Aerial Navigation (M.N. Forney, ed.), Chicago, Illinois, Aug. 1-4, 1893, Published by the American Engineer and Railroad Journal, pp. 247-249.
  43. ^ Montgomery, John J. (1894) "Discussion of the Various Papers on Soaring Flight," Aeronautics Vol. 1, No. 10 (July), pp. 127-128.
  44. ^ "Forgotten Aviation Pioneer: California's Own John J. Montgomery". militarymuseum.org. Retrieved April 28, 2015.
  45. ^ "A Home School – What is Taught at Mt. St. Joseph's College," The Daily Standard, Eureka, CA, December 31, 1894.
  46. ^ Fogel, Gary B.; Harwood, Craig S. (January 4, 2016). John J. Montgomery's Circulation Theory of Lift. 54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting. San Diego. doi:10.2514/6.2016-1159. Retrieved December 11, 2020.
  47. ^ "John J. Montgomery Manuscript "Soaring Flight"". Flickr. December 28, 2012. Retrieved April 28, 2015.
  48. ^ Chanute, Octave (July 17, 1895). "Montgomery publication". Letter to Matthias Forney.
  49. ^ Chanute, Octave (July 15, 1895). "Montgomery publication". Letter to John Montgomery.
  50. ^ Chanute, Octave (March 17, 1895). "Ground effect". Letter to August Herring.
  51. ^ "Local scientists invent a new system of wireless telegraphy," San Francisco Call, March 6, 1904.
  52. ^ "Montgomery Seeks to Restrain Baldwin and Seeks Damages". San Jose Evening News. San Francisco, CA. April 7, 1905.
  53. ^ "Airship Inventor Visits San Jose: Captain Baldwin, Builder of the California Arrow, Talks of His Plans and Future of Aerial Navigation". San Jose Daily Mercury. San Jose, CA. December 5, 1904.
  54. ^ Baldwin, Thomas. New York World Magazine, November 27, 1904
  55. ^ a b "Father Bell and Captain Baldwin: Priest-Scientist of Santa Clara College Gives Credit for Success of Aerial Experiments to Professor Montgomery". San Jose Daily Mercury. San Jose, CA. December 6, 1904.
  56. ^ "Aeronauts Row Over Airship". San Francisco Call. San Francisco, CA. April 8, 1905.
  57. ^ "Careful Research of Several Years Assured Success". San Francisco Bulletin. San Francisco, CA. March 26, 1905.
  58. ^ "Inventor of New Airship Has Trouble with Baldwin". San Jose Mercury. San Francisco, CA. April 7, 1905.
  59. ^ J. Mayne Baltimore, "The New Baldwin Airship," Scientific American 91, no. 9 (August 27, 1904): 147.
  60. ^ Glenn H. Curtiss and Augustus Post, The Curtiss Aviation Book (New York: Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1912), 30.
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  63. ^ Knabenshue, A. R., "My Flights in the 'Arrow'", The Independent, Nov. 10, 1904, vol LVII, pp 1127-1130.
  64. ^ Dewey, Elbert E. (1905). "An Airship's Success". The Technical World. 1 (September): 476–484.
  65. ^ John J. Montgomery, letter to Octave Chanute, April 11, 1905 in Arthur Spearman, S J, John Joseph Montgomery Father of Basic Flying, Univ. of Santa Clara, 1967 pp. 92-94
  66. ^ Bell, Richard H. (1905). "The Success of March 18th". The Redwood. 4 (5): 24–25.
  67. ^ Masfrand, D.E. (1905). "Les Essais et la Catastrophe du 'Santa Clara'". L'Aérophile (August): 178–180.
  68. ^ DeMeriel, P. (1905). "Un aeroplane a 1200 meters". La Nature (November 25): 412.
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  70. ^ "Notizen". Wiener Luftschiffer-Zeitung. 4 (8): 169–170. 1905.
  71. ^ "The Montgomery Aeroplane". Automotor Journal. 10: 1079. 1905.
  72. ^ A. Jeyasmet, "Máquina Veladora" El Heraldo de Madrid, March 31, 1905, MO XVI.—NUM. 5.242
  73. ^ Coupin, Henri (1905). "Un descende de 1200 metres en aeroplane". Le Magasin Pittoresque (March): 139–140.
  74. ^ Harwood, Craig S.; Fogel, Gary B. (January 7, 2019). On the Invention of Lateral Control: Wright and Montgomery. AIAA Scitech 2019 Forum. San Diego. doi:10.2514/6.2019-0123. Retrieved December 11, 2020.
  75. ^ "The Montgomery Aeroplane". Scientific American (May 20): 404. 1905.
  76. ^ "Most Daring Test of Flying Machine Ever Made". Popular Mechanics. 7 (6): 703–707. 1905.
  77. ^ "The Montgomery Aeroplane". Popular Mechanics. 7 (7): 703–707. 1905.
  78. ^ Maxim, Hudson and William Joseph Hammer. 1910. Chronology of Aviation. Westfield, N.J.: H. Francis, printer., p. 8.
  79. ^ Octave Chanute, "Montgomery's Experiments", in Herman Modebeck's Pocket Book of Aeronautics
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  81. ^ Klemin, Alexander. "Gliding," Encyclopædia Britannica, 1943.
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  83. ^ Davy, M.J.B. (1929). Aeronautics – Handbook of Collection Illustrating Heavier-Than-Air Craft. London, England: Science Museum.
  84. ^ "Cornell University". The Cornell Engineer: 9. 1935.
  85. ^ Johnson, Kenneth M. (1961) Aerial California: An Account of Early Flight in Northern and Southern California, 1849 to World War I, Dawson's Book Shop, Los Angeles, California.
  86. ^ Copy of membership card can be found in the John J. Montgomery Papers 1885-1947, The Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina Library, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
  87. ^ John J. Montgomery Papers 1885-1947, The Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina Library, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
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  94. ^ Campion, John C. (September 1950). "Paul Tuntland page 5" (PDF). soaringweb.org. (PDF) from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
  95. ^ "Retakes of Flying History". Popular Science (August). Bonnier Corporation. 1946.
  96. ^ #711: Montgomery Memorial, Otay Mesa 24 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine(32.577449 -117.052631)
  97. ^ Wilson, Bob (1994). "Starting the Montgomery Monument". San Diego Aerospace Museum Newsletter (Spring).
  98. ^ a b "First Glider Tower Takes Initial Flight," San Diego Union May 21, 1950.
  99. ^ "Montgomery-Waller Recreation Center - City of San Diego Official Website". sandiego.gov. Retrieved July 24, 2016.
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  101. ^ #813: Montgomery Hill, San Jose May 14, 2018, at the Wayback Machine(37.302289 -121.758084)
  102. ^ Pizarro: Evergreen artwork honors valley's pioneer of flight - San Jose Mercury News at www.mercurynews.com
  103. ^ City and County of San Francisco, Board of Supervisors, Municipal Record 12, no. 1 (1919), p. 394
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  114. ^ "Santa Clara University School of Engineering - Campus Changes". scu.edu. Retrieved April 28, 2015.
  115. ^ "Tribute to 'Father of Flying' Planned by Bay Region," San Francisco Chronicle March 11, 1934.
  116. ^ "John J Montgomery Obelisk - Santa Clara, CA - Obelisks on Waymarking.com". waymarking.com. Retrieved April 28, 2015.
  117. ^ Rhodes, W.T. (1951). "Montgomery Freeway Will Relieve Traffic in South San Diego". California Highways. Jan.-Feb.: 34–35.
  118. ^ "US 101 Photo Gallery". gbcnet.com. Retrieved April 28, 2015.
  119. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 24, 2015. Retrieved March 11, 2015.
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  121. ^ . Archived from the original on April 10, 2008. Retrieved March 20, 2008.
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  123. ^ Sprekelmeyer, Linda, editor. These We Honor: The International Aerospace Hall of Fame. Donning Co. Publishers, 2006. ISBN 978-1-57864-397-4.
  124. ^ "Crownair Aviation hangs replica Santa Clara glider in lobby". Globalair.com. June 2, 2023. Retrieved January 1, 2024.

Biographies edit

  • Spearman, Arthur Dunning John J. Montgomery: Father of Basic Flying. Santa Clara University 1967 and 2nd ed. 1977.
  • Harwood, Craig S. and Fogel, Gary B. Quest for Flight: John J. Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West. University of Oklahoma Press 2012.

Research archives edit

  • John J. Montgomery Collection, Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, California.
  • John J. Montgomery Personal Papers, San Diego Air and Space Museum, San Diego, California.
  • John J. Montgomery Papers 1885–1947, The Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina Library, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

External links edit

  • John J. Montgomery: San Diego Historical Society
  • John J. Montgomery: Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum April 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Biography with photos at flyingmachines.org
  • John J. Montgomery: Santa Clara College March 22, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  • History of John J. Montgomery's flights at Rohnerville September 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • That Magnificent Man With His Flying Machine September 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine

john, joseph, montgomery, february, 1858, october, 1911, american, inventor, physicist, engineer, professor, santa, clara, university, santa, clara, california, best, known, invention, controlled, heavier, than, flying, machines, born, 1858, february, 1858yuba. John Joseph Montgomery February 15 1858 October 31 1911 was an American inventor physicist engineer and professor at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara California who is best known for his invention of controlled heavier than air flying machines 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 John Joseph MontgomeryBorn 1858 02 15 February 15 1858Yuba City CaliforniaDiedOctober 31 1911 1911 10 31 aged 53 Evergreen San Jose CaliforniaCause of deathGliding accidentResting placeColma California37 40 16 N 122 26 43 W 37 671155 N 122 445191 W 37 671155 122 445191NationalityAmericanEducationSt Ignatius College BA MS Occupation s aviation pioneer inventor professor of physics physicistSpouseRegina Cleary m 1910 Signature In the 1880s Montgomery a native of Yuba City California made manned flight experiments in a series of gliders in the United States in Otay Mesa near San Diego California 8 9 7 10 11 12 Although not publicized in the 1880s these early flights were first described by Montgomery as part of a lecture delivered at the International Conference on Aerial Navigation at Chicago 1893 13 14 These independent advances came after gliding flights by European pioneers such as George Cayley s coachman in England 1853 and Jean Marie Le Bris in France 1856 15 Although Montgomery never claimed firsts his gliding experiments of the 1880s are considered by some historians and organizations to have been the first controlled flights of a heavier than air flying machine in America 16 14 17 or in the Western Hemisphere 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 depending on the source Montgomery devised different control methods for his gliders including weight shifting for roll and an elevator for pitch 1884 Subsequent designs used hinged pilot operated trailing edge flaps on the wings 1885 1886 for roll control 26 27 28 29 9 30 and later full wing warping systems for roll 1903 1905 31 32 and for both pitch and roll 1911 33 Contents 1 Education 2 Ornithology 3 Fixed wing gliders 4 Aerodynamics 5 Invention 6 Tandem wing gliders 7 Evergreen 8 Death 9 Organizational memberships 10 Gallant Journey 11 Recognition 11 1 Historical landmarks 11 2 Airports and aviation clubs 11 3 Schools 11 4 Other recognition 12 See also 13 Publications 14 Patents 15 References 16 Biographies 16 1 Research archives 17 External linksEducation editMontgomery attended St Ignatius High School graduating in 1873 At age 16 he attended the preparatory division at Santa Clara College from 1874 to 1876 to prepare for college 34 Montgomery attended St Ignatius College now known as the University of San Francisco Here he studied under Fathers Joseph Bayma S J and Joseph Neri S J two gifted and influential educators 34 As a student in San Francisco Montgomery must have mentioned his desire to build a flying machine according to Fogel and Harwood 34 They include an observation in their book made by Montgomery s contemporary Rev Fred Morrison S J In those days anyone who even mentioned man being able to fly was considered a little bit off 34 So when John was in the vicinity there was a general tapping of heads which in our present day would be the sign that the party was crazy 34 At St Ignatius College Montgomery received a Bachelor of Arts in physics in 1879 and a master s degree in physics in 1880 34 He also received an honorary PhD in physics from Santa Clara University in 1901 34 Ornithology editIn the early 1880s Montgomery began studying the anatomy of a variety of large soaring birds to determine their basic characteristics like wing area weight and curved surfaces He made detailed observations of birds in flight especially large soaring birds such as eagles hawks vultures and pelicans which soared on thermals near San Diego Bay 35 He initially attempted to achieve manned flight with ornithopters In 1883 he built and experimented with a series of three ornithopters but found that human strength was insufficient to generate the necessary lift He abandoned flapping wing flight preferring instead to emulate soaring birds with fixed wing craft He reasoned that it would be possible to solve the physics of gliding and soaring flight and then add a motor 36 Fixed wing gliders editMontgomery first tested his concepts for the design construction and control of gliders with small scale free flight models His first glider in 1883 84 had a cambered airfoil based on the curve of the seagull wing Pitch was controlled by an operable elevator and roll was controlled by pilot weight shift Yaw was uncontrolled This aircraft design served as the basis for three gliders over the period 1883 1886 In the spring of 1884 Montgomery made flights of up to 600 feet 180 m 29 from the rim of Otay Mesa 9 37 During experiments with this craft Montgomery found that the glider would not respond well to side gusts He returned to ornithology and noted how turkey vultures had significant dihedral and twisted their wings as a form of lateral balance 9 Emulating these control methods in 1884 1885 he incorporated hinged flaps into the trailing edge of a second glider These were held under spring tension for automatic balance in gusts but were also connected through cables to the pilot s seat so they could be operated mechanically by the pilot for roll control 9 38 In essence these flaps were early ailerons 29 39 The second glider had a flat plate airfoil considerable dihedral for stability and an operable elevator for pitch control Montgomery devised an inclined rail system so the piloted glider could roll from the top of a hill and attain flight speed In the winter of 1885 86 Montgomery constructed a third glider It had a cambered airfoil modeled after the wings of a vulture though the leading and trailing edges were turned upward slightly The wing spanwise was gull shaped Controls allowed the pilot to vary the angle of incidence of the left and right wing either in unison or independently Dihedral and an operable elevator were also included 9 Montgomery concluded that a better understanding of aerodynamics was needed for the design of a proper airfoil In an 1893 speech Montgomery said that flights were made in these three craft during the period 1884 1886 with the occasional assistance of at least three friends and two younger brothers 40 Of the flight trials with the second craft of 1885 Octave Chanute s account in 1893 noted several trials were made but no effective lift could be obtained Of the third craft of 1886 Chanute wrote this last apparatus proved an entire failure as no effective lifting effect could be obtained from the wind sufficient to carry the 180 lbs it was designed to bear 41 Montgomery s own account made clear that he considered the technology of the second and third gliders of 1885 and 1886 as effective but the airfoil designs were a disappointment in terms of lift generation as they produced much shorter gliding flights in comparison to the first craft of 1884 He realized he was getting increasingly farther from understanding the mechanism of lift and began controlled laboratory experiments to investigate airfoils In 1886 he briefly considered filing a patent caveat for lateral balancing but did not 10 Aerodynamics editAbout 1885 Montgomery began a long series of experiments with a whirling arm device a smoke chamber a water current table and large wooden surfaces angled into the wind in order to understand the physics of flow around curved surfaces 42 He also used dried bird wings placed in wind currents to observe the effect His work in the 1880s confirmed that mechanical systems used by a pilot could preserve lateral balance and some degree of equilibrium in gliding flight His experiments also confirmed the value of a cambered surface for obtaining lift 43 In 1893 Montgomery visited the World s Columbian Exposition in Chicago intending initially to attend a lecture by electrical expert Nikola Tesla Upon arrival he heard of the International Conference on Aerial Navigation to take place the first week of August He introduced himself to Octave Chanute and Albert F Zahm who were collaborating in chairing the conference He did not present a paper but was subsequently invited by Chanute and Zahm to participate in the conference by giving two lectures of his own His first focused on his experiments with surfaces in air and water currents This talk was revised into an article and included in the conference proceedings 44 The article was later published in the July 1894 edition of Aeronautics With encouragement from Chanute Montgomery decided to give a second lecture Although he refrained from providing enough detail that might be useful to designers he did discuss use of hinged wing sections for lateral control 13 His second lecture was not published as part of the conference proceedings because Chanute thought Montgomery wanted to seek patent protection Instead Chanute presented his own comments on Montgomery s flight experiments in his article series Progress in Flying Machines which was published serially in the American Engineer and Railroad Journal in 1893 and in the following year as a book of the same name Montgomery reprised his second lecture in a talk to the Aeronautical Society of New York in 1910 and the contents were later published in several journals and books 9 From 1893 to 1895 while teaching at Mount St Joseph s College in Rohnerville California 45 Montgomery conducted further experiments into the physics of flow over a wing and lift generation using a smoke chamber and water table From these experiments he developed a theory of lift based on vorticity or what modern aerodynamicists refer to as a circulation theory or lifting line theory 10 46 Montgomery compiled his results into a 131 page manuscript titled Soaring Flight 47 and attempted to have it published by Matthias N Forney and the editors of Scientific American with the help of Octave Chanute 48 Chanute was reluctant to endorse it due to his disagreements with some of its theoretical content and suggested that it be edited to distinguish between experimental results and theoretical inferences 49 Scientific American rejected the manuscript but later published an abstract Chanute also directed one of his collaborators Augustus Herring to study the manuscript as he considered it instructive in understanding ground effect 50 Invention editIn 1884 Montgomery received a patent for a process to vulcanize and de vulcanize India rubber In 1895 and again in the period 1901 to 1904 Montgomery occasionally supplemented his aeronautical research with work in other branches of science including electricity communication astronomy and mining In 1895 he received four patents American German British and Canadian for improvements in the efficiency of petroleum burning furnaces In 1897 he took a teaching position at Santa Clara College and directed study of wireless telegraphy with Father Richard Bell They were first to successfully transmit messages from Santa Clara College to San Francisco 51 Montgomery also patented two gold concentrator devices to assist miners in extracting gold from beach sands see patent list Tandem wing gliders editIn early 1903 veteran balloonist Thomas Scott Baldwin sought Montgomery s knowledge of aeronautics Baldwin had also been assisting August Greth in constructing and experimenting with an airship dubbed the California Eagle at San Jose California 52 Baldwin wanted improved propeller designs for dirigibles He stopped working with Greth and came to Santa Clara College for an extended period to learn aeronautics from Montgomery Their work together included wind tunnel tests at the college 53 54 55 At Baldwin s suggestion they entered into a business arrangement in 1904 to make public exhibitions with manned Montgomery gliders launched at high altitudes from unmanned Baldwin balloons 56 By late May 1904 Montgomery made test flights with a new glider 57 58 However Baldwin abandoned their collaboration and instead constructed his own airship the California Arrow at San Jose incorporating Montgomery s propeller design and a 7 horsepower motorcycle engine the Hercules of G H Curtiss Mfg Co The California Arrow would be first in America to make repeated circuits under control 55 59 60 61 During a protracted period of acrimony between Montgomery and Baldwin Baldwin entered the California Arrow in the aeronautic competition at the St Louis World s Fair in November 1904 and took first place 62 63 64 nbsp John J Montgomery and his tandem wing glider The Santa Clara on 29 April 1905 In the fall of 1904 Montgomery conducted tests of his tandem wing glider the Montgomery Aeroplane with associates Frank Hamilton and Daniel J Maloney On March 16 17 and 20 1905 in Aptos California Daniel Maloney made several successful flights in the glider at Leonard s ranch Rancho San Antonio now known as Seascape after releasing from a hot air balloon at high altitude The resulting glides were well controlled and flights lasted up to 13 minutes 65 66 News of these flights received attention in both the U S and Europe 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 After this success Montgomery gave a press conference to provide for the first time a history of his efforts in aeronautics and announced a patent application for his aeroplane and methods of wing warping 74 On April 29 1905 Montgomery Maloney and Hamilton provided a public demonstration of the Montgomery Aeroplane rechristened that day as The Santa Clara in honor of Santa Clara College In view of hundreds of spectators and members of the press Maloney released from the balloon at an approximate altitude of 4 000 feet above Santa Clara College Maloney performed a series of pre determined maneuvers and made a soft landing near the college grounds 75 76 77 This exhibition brought widespread recognition for Montgomery and was generally accepted as a milestone in aviation 6 78 79 80 81 82 83 14 84 In the following months Montgomery and Maloney made many exhibitions with The Santa Clara and another tandem wing glider The California in the San Francisco bay area On July 18 1905 Maloney was killed when a rope from the balloon damaged the glider during the ascent causing structural failure after release Despite this Montgomery continued experiments with other tandem wing gliders and pilots for some time Evergreen edit nbsp John J Montgomery landing The Evergreen monoplane glider in October 1911 Following the catastrophic 1906 San Francisco earthquake Montgomery s gliding experiments were curtailed until 1911 Montgomery began experimenting with a new control system in which pitch and roll of the glider were managed by wing warping while the tail assembly was fixed Montgomery intended to add a motor and apply for a patent This glider The Evergreen named after the Evergreen district of San Jose California where flight tests occurred was flown by Montgomery as well as another aeronaut Reinhardt more than 50 times in October 1911 Death editOn October 31 1911 Montgomery was attempting to land Evergreen at low speed and encountered turbulence which caused a stall He crashed and died from his injuries at the site The hillside now known as Montgomery Hill is just behind Evergreen Valley College John J Montgomery was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma California on November 3 1911 Organizational memberships editThe Pacific Aero Club 1909 founding member 85 The Aero Club of Illinois 1910 86 The Aeronautical Society of New York 1910 elected honorary member in recognition of his manifold labors to advance the art of aviation 39 The Aeronautical Society 1911 as invited member of the Research Committee of the Technical Board 87 88 and Organization and Convention Committee 89 The Santa Clara Valley Aero Club 1911 first Vice President 90 Gallant Journey editIn 1946 Columbia Pictures released Gallant Journey a full length movie 91 based on John J Montgomery s life and work The film was directed by William A Wellman and starred Glenn Ford as Montgomery Janet Blair as his wife Regina nee Cleary whom he had married in 1910 and Charles Ruggles The stunt pilots for the film were Paul Mantz 92 Paul Tuntland 93 94 and Don Stevens The film included several different historical reenactments of Montgomery s glider flights 95 Gallant Journey premiered in San Diego California on September 2 1946 and had its full national release September 24 1946 As part of the publicity for the movie Columbia Pictures sponsored a cross country Boston to Los Angeles tour featuring a 1911 vintage auto the same vintage as Montgomery s last flight William Wellman had served previously in the U S Army Air Corps and was stationed as an officer at Rockwell Field San Diego California and Glenn Ford had also served in San Diego during World War II Recognition editHistorical landmarks edit nbsp The plaque placed at Montgomery Grove It was relocated from Evergreen Valley College s campus to the current site Two California Historical Landmarks are associated with Montgomery Montgomery Memorial Otay Mesa 96 97 The Montgomery Memorial was dedicated on May 21 1950 and features a silver static test wing panel for the Consolidated B 32 Dominator mounted upright that is visible for miles 98 It is also associated with a recreation center near the location of his first glides Montgomery Waller Recreation Center San Diego California 99 The memorial was designed by pioneering modernist Lloyd Ruocco 100 Montgomery Hill San Jose 101 near Evergreen Valley College Evergreen Valley College also honors his memory with a green space Montgomery Grove a lecture hall Montgomery Hall and an observatory Montgomery Hill Observatory On March 15 2008 a sculpture was unveiled at San Felipe and Yerba Buena roads in San Jose California as a tribute to Montgomery The 30 foot tall steel structure of a glider wing was placed on a 32 foot diameter plaza later designated Montgomery Plaza designed by San Francisco artist Kent Roberts 102 Airports and aviation clubs edit In 1919 the San Francisco Board of Supervisors changed the name of the Marina Flying Field just east of Crissy Field to Montgomery Field 103 From 1920 to 1944 Montgomery Field served as an airmail facility This field still exists along the Embarcadero as Marina Green On May 20 1950 Montgomery Field KMYF in San Diego California one of the busiest general aviation airports in the world was named in his honor 98 nbsp Dedication plaque for Montgomery Field San Diego Civil Air Patrol Squadron 36 in San Jose California is named the John J Montgomery Memorial Cadet Squadron 36 in his honor 104 Their motto is Exceed the Challenge Experimental Aircraft Association Chapter 338 in San Jose California is also named in honor of Montgomery 105 Schools edit nbsp Silver Wing monument at Montgomery Waller Recreation Center in Otay Mesa San Diego California Chula Vista Elementary School District John J Montgomery Elementary School Chula Vista California 106 Evergreen Elementary School District John J Montgomery Elementary School San Jose California 107 San Diego Unified School District Montgomery Middle School San Diego California 108 Sweetwater Union High School District Montgomery High School San Diego California 109 Montgomery Middle School San Diego California 110 Other recognition edit nbsp A marker placed at Aptos California where Montgomery s tandem wing glider was flown in March 1905 for the first high altitude flights in the world John J Montgomery was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1964 U S Soaring Hall of Fame in 2001 111 California Aviation Hall of Fame in 2015 112 and International Aerospace Hall of Fame in 2017 113 In 1924 a new engineering building was dedicated as the Montgomery Laboratories on the campus of Santa Clara University This laboratory was located where Mayer Theatre is today 114 A celebration was held March 18 1934 at Santa Clara University to mark the 50th anniversary of Montgomery s first glider flight 115 Also on the campus of Santa Clara University an obelisk was dedicated by the citizens of Santa Clara California to Montgomery on April 29 1946 at the location of Maloney s 1905 glider flights 116 In 1949 a section of what is now part of the Interstate 5 freeway that passes through the former site of the Montgomery 1880s Fruitland Ranch and goes from the Mexican border to downtown San Diego California was named the John J Montgomery Freeway 117 118 In the 1960s the National Society of Aerospace Professionals and the San Diego Aerospace Museum established a John J Montgomery Award for aerospace excellence Members of the X 15 Mercury and Polaris programs received the award including astronauts such as Neil Armstrong On May 11 1996 Montgomery s 1883 glider was recognized as an International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 119 On March 19 2005 John J Montgomery was the focus of a Centennial Celebration of Soaring Flight held in Aptos California at the location of some of his early glider experiments At this celebration a marker was placed in Aptos in honor of the first manned high altitude flights 120 nbsp Replica of The Evergreen at the Hiller Aviation Museum On April 5 2008 a celebration of the 125th anniversary of John Montgomery s first glide took place at the Hiller Aviation Museum in San Carlos California 121 In May 2016 the San Diego Air amp Space Museum established a new exhibit for John J Montgomery in their main rotunda including The Evergreen glider from 1911 and Montgomery s original Soaring Flight manuscript from 1896 122 In 2017 Montgomery was inducted into the International Air amp Space Hall of Fame at the Museum 123 In June 2023 a replica of The Santa Clara glider was installed in the lobby of Crownair Aviation at Montgomery Gibbs Executive Airport in San Diego The glider is on loan from the San Diego Air and Space Museum 124 See also editTimeline of aviation 19th century List of Santa Clara University people Daniel J Maloney Frederick Marriott Zachariah Montgomery Wright brothersPublications edit nbsp The Evergreen glider restored by the Smithsonian Institution on display at the San Diego Air amp Space Museum Montgomery John J Discussions on the Various Papers on Soaring Flight Proceedings of the International Conference on Aerial Navigation Chicago Aug 1 4 1893 pp 246 249 Montgomery John J Soaring Flight manuscript 1895 under flickr com Montgomery John J The Mechanics Involved in a Bird s Wing in Soaring and Their Relation to Aeronautics Address to the Southern California Academy of Sciences Los Angeles Nov 9 1897 Montgomery John J The Aeroplane The Aeroplane Advertising Co Santa Clara California 1905 Montgomery John J New Principles in Aerial Flight Scientific American November 25 1905 Montgomery John J Principles Involved in the Formation of Winged Surfaces and the Phenomenon of Soaring presented at the Aeronautics Congress New York Oct 28 29 1907 Published as a series in Aeronautics Vol 3 No 4 pp 30 33 October 1908 Vol 3 No 5 pp 34 40 November 1908 Vol 3 No 6 pp 32 36 December 1908 Vol 4 No 1 pp 43 46 Montgomery John J Some Early Gliding Experiments in America Aeronautics Vol 4 No 1 1909 pp 47 50 Montgomery John J The Origin of Wing Warping Professor Montgomery s Experiments Aeronautics London Vol 3 No 6 1910 pp 63 64 Montgomery John J Our Tutors in the Art of Flying Aeronautics September 22 1915 pp 99 100 article printed posthumously Patents editU S patent 0 308 189 Devulcanizing and restoring vulcanized rubber 1884 November 18 U S patent 0 549 679 Petroleum burner 1895 November 12 British Patent 21477 Petroleum burner and furnace 1895 November 12 German Patent 88977 Petroleum oven 1895 November 12 Canadian Patent 50585 Petroleum burner 1895 November 14 Canadian Patent 70319 Concentrator 1901 February 19 U S patent 0 679 155 Concentrator 1901 July 23 U S patent 0 742 889 Concentrator 1903 November 3 U S patent 0 831 173 Aeroplane 1906 September 18 U S patent 0 974 171 Rectifying electric currents 1910 November 1 U S patent 0 974 415 Process for compelling electric motors to keep in step with the waves or impulses of the current driving them and a motor embodying the process 1910 November 1References edit Tandy Edward T 1910 An Epitome of the Work of the Aeronautic Society from July 1908 to December 1909 New York NY Aeronautic Society of New York Peyrey Francois 1909 Les Oiseaux Artificiels Paris France Derlis Freres An American Pioneer of Soaring Flight John J Montgomery Aviation 4 1 302 303 1918 Walker Thomas 1910 The Art of Flying London England King Sell amp Olding Turner Charles C 1910 Aerial Navigation of To day A Popular Account of the Evolution of Aeronautics London England Seeley amp Co a b Colwell J H 1920 The Origin and Development of Aeronautics Journal of the Patent Office Society 3 12 a b Hunt Rockwell D 1932 John J Montgomery California and Californians 3 126 27 The Montgomery Evergreen Archived April 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum a b c d e f g Montgomery John J April 21 1910 The Origin of Wing Warping Speech Aeronautic Society of New York Aeronautics 1910 a b c Harwood Craig Fogel Gary 2012 Quest for Flight John J Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806142647 Berriman Algernon E Aviation An Introduction to the Elements of Flight Methuen amp Co London 1912 pp 213 214 Montgomery s Gliding Experiments in Hayward Charles B Practical Aeronautics An Understandable Presentation of Interesting and Essential Facts in Aeronautical Science Chicago American School of Correspondence 1912 a b Zahm Albert F 1923 Catholic Contributions in the Field of Aeronautics in Benson William Shepherd James J Walsh Edward J Hanna and Constantine E McGuire Catholic Builders of the Nation A Symposium on the Catholic Contribution to the Civilization of the United States Boston Continental Press a b c Pritchard John Lawrence 1929 The Book of The Aeroplane The University of Michigan Longmans Green amp Company p 17 The Journal of San Diego History July 1968 Vol 14 No 3 National Cyclopedia of American Biography Being the History of the United States as Illustrated in the Lives of the Founders Builders amp Defenders of the Republic etc Edited by Distinguished Biographers James T White amp Co Volume XVI 1916 Mark D Ardema and Joseph Mach Santa Clara University School of Engineering and William J Adams Jr John Joseph Montgomery 1883 Glider An International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark Designated by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers May 11 1996 at Hiller Aircraft Museum and Santa Clara University brochure 11 pp Montgomery First to Conquer the Air Austrian Officials after Inquiry Give Palm to California Inventor San Francisco Examiner May 16 1909 See also Conquering the Air San Francisco Monitor June 12 1909 Jacobs James W John Joseph Montgomery In James W Jacobs Enshrinee Album The First Twenty One Years 134 n 35 Dayton Ohio National Aviation Hall of Fame 1984 McCormick Barnes 2004 Aerospace Engineering Education During the First Century of Flight Reston VA American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics ISBN 9781563477102 L Echo Des Ailes Revue Independante pour la Defense des Interets Aeronautiques Vol 17 No 2 January 23 1948 By Federation des Clubs Belges d Aviation de Tourisme Brussels Belgium Flug Revue Flight Review 1968 Vereinigte Motor Verlage p 155 Hearings Reports and Prints of the House Committee on Science and Astronautics United States Congress House Committee on Science and Astronautics U S Govt Printing Office Washington D C 1972 Histoire de l Aeronautique et de l Espace 2001 Davy Maurice J B 1935 Aeronautics Science Museum Professor Montgomery s Experiments Aeronautics London 3 6 73 111 1910 Machine with Wings Upsets Theories Years of Research Applied to Solving the Problem San Jose Mercury Evening News March 31 1905 Third Tests Are All Successful San Francisco Bulletin March 26 1905 a b c Montgomery John J 1909 Some Early Gliding Experiments In America Aeronautics New York 4 1 Hayward Charles B ed 1912 Practical Aeronautics American School of Correspondence Chicago Introduction written by Orville Wright The Origin of Warping Professor Montgomery s Experiments Aeronautics 3 6 London 63 64 Chanute Octave 1907 Montgomery In Pocket Book of Aeronautics edited by Hermann W L Moedebeck translated by W Mansergh Varley Vol 309 No 10 London Whittaker and Co Campi Richard B 1961 Description and Analysis of the 1911 Montgomery Controllable Man Carrying Glider Working paper December 29 1961 a b c d e f g The Great Jewel of Education 1880 1905 St Ignatius College Prep www siprep org Retrieved November 2 2022 Montgomery John 1910 Our Tutors in the Art of Flying Aeronautics London 99 100 Kavanagh Dennis K 1905 The Aeroplane Santa Clara California The Aeroplane Advertising Company Montgomery James P direct testimony in response to Q 16 Jan 13 1919 Regina C Montgomery et al v the United States Equity No 33852 Montgomery Richard J Direct Testimony in Court Equity No 33852 on January 13 1919 a b Montgomery Hits Wright s Patent California College Professor Claims He Invented Warped Wings Back in 1885 New York World April 24 1910 United States n d Court of Claims of the United States No 33852 Regina Cleary Montgomery heir and Richard J Montgomery Mary C Montgomery Margaret H Montgomery and Jane E Montgomery assignees of Ellen Montgomery heir of John J Montgomery deceased v the United States Testimony provided in direct and cross examination by Charles T Couts Charles Burroughs James P Montgomery Richard J Montgomery Mary F McCarthy January 1919 Chanute Octave 1893 Progress in Flying Machines The American Engineer and Railroad Journal Dec 1893 Montgomery John J 1894 Discussion of the Various Papers on Soaring Flight Proceedings of the Conference on Aerial Navigation M N Forney ed Chicago Illinois Aug 1 4 1893 Published by the American Engineer and Railroad Journal pp 247 249 Montgomery John J 1894 Discussion of the Various Papers on Soaring Flight Aeronautics Vol 1 No 10 July pp 127 128 Forgotten Aviation Pioneer California s Own John J Montgomery militarymuseum org Retrieved April 28 2015 A Home School What is Taught at Mt St Joseph s College The Daily Standard Eureka CA December 31 1894 Fogel Gary B Harwood Craig S January 4 2016 John J Montgomery s Circulation Theory of Lift 54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting San Diego doi 10 2514 6 2016 1159 Retrieved December 11 2020 John J Montgomery Manuscript Soaring Flight Flickr December 28 2012 Retrieved April 28 2015 Chanute Octave July 17 1895 Montgomery publication Letter to Matthias Forney Chanute Octave July 15 1895 Montgomery publication Letter to John Montgomery Chanute Octave March 17 1895 Ground effect Letter to August Herring Local scientists invent a new system of wireless telegraphy San Francisco Call March 6 1904 Montgomery Seeks to Restrain Baldwin and Seeks Damages San Jose Evening News San Francisco CA April 7 1905 Airship Inventor Visits San Jose Captain Baldwin Builder of the California Arrow Talks of His Plans and Future of Aerial Navigation San Jose Daily Mercury San Jose CA December 5 1904 Baldwin Thomas New York World Magazine November 27 1904 a b Father Bell and Captain Baldwin Priest Scientist of Santa Clara College Gives Credit for Success of Aerial Experiments to Professor Montgomery San Jose Daily Mercury San Jose CA December 6 1904 Aeronauts Row Over Airship San Francisco Call San Francisco CA April 8 1905 Careful Research of Several Years Assured Success San Francisco Bulletin San Francisco CA March 26 1905 Inventor of New Airship Has Trouble with Baldwin San Jose Mercury San Francisco CA April 7 1905 J Mayne Baltimore The New Baldwin Airship Scientific American 91 no 9 August 27 1904 147 Glenn H Curtiss and Augustus Post The Curtiss Aviation Book New York Frederick A Stokes Co 1912 30 Did Baldwin Have Ideas for Airship San Jose Mercury News San Jose CA December 27 1904 Scamehorn Howard Lee 1905 Thomas Scott Baldwin The Columbus of the Air Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 49 2 163 189 Knabenshue A R My Flights in the Arrow The Independent Nov 10 1904 vol LVII pp 1127 1130 Dewey Elbert E 1905 An Airship s Success The Technical World 1 September 476 484 John J Montgomery letter to Octave Chanute April 11 1905 in Arthur Spearman S J John Joseph Montgomery Father of Basic Flying Univ of Santa Clara 1967 pp 92 94 Bell Richard H 1905 The Success of March 18th The Redwood 4 5 24 25 Masfrand D E 1905 Les Essais et la Catastrophe du Santa Clara L Aerophile August 178 180 DeMeriel P 1905 Un aeroplane a 1200 meters La Nature November 25 412 Hermann Moedebeck Fliegende Menschen Das Ringen um die Beherrschung der Luft mittels Flugmaschinen Berlin O Salle 1905 Notizen Wiener Luftschiffer Zeitung 4 8 169 170 1905 The Montgomery Aeroplane Automotor Journal 10 1079 1905 A Jeyasmet Maquina Veladora El Heraldo de Madrid March 31 1905 MO XVI NUM 5 242 Coupin Henri 1905 Un descende de 1200 metres en aeroplane Le Magasin Pittoresque March 139 140 Harwood Craig S Fogel Gary B January 7 2019 On the Invention of Lateral Control Wright and Montgomery AIAA Scitech 2019 Forum San Diego doi 10 2514 6 2019 0123 Retrieved December 11 2020 The Montgomery Aeroplane Scientific American May 20 404 1905 Most Daring Test of Flying Machine Ever Made Popular Mechanics 7 6 703 707 1905 The Montgomery Aeroplane Popular Mechanics 7 7 703 707 1905 Maxim Hudson and William Joseph Hammer 1910 Chronology of Aviation Westfield N J H Francis printer p 8 Octave Chanute Montgomery s Experiments in Herman Modebeck s Pocket Book of Aeronautics Hayward Charles B ed Practical Aeronautics American School of Correspondence Chicago 1912 Klemin Alexander Gliding Encyclopaedia Britannica 1943 Albert F Zahm The Growth of Passive Flyers in Aviation Scientific American Reference Book Munn amp Co Inc New York NY 1912 p 441 Davy M J B 1929 Aeronautics Handbook of Collection Illustrating Heavier Than Air Craft London England Science Museum Cornell University The Cornell Engineer 9 1935 Johnson Kenneth M 1961 Aerial California An Account of Early Flight in Northern and Southern California 1849 to World War I Dawson s Book Shop Los Angeles California Copy of membership card can be found in the John J Montgomery Papers 1885 1947 The Southern Historical Collection University of North Carolina Library Chapel Hill North Carolina John J Montgomery Papers 1885 1947 The Southern Historical Collection University of North Carolina Library Chapel Hill North Carolina Club News Aircraft July 159 1911 Gibson Ada 1910 Club News Aircraft July 191 Club News Aeronautics 8 3 110 1911 Neil Doyle September 24 1946 Gallant Journey 1946 IMDb Retrieved April 28 2015 Dwiggins Don 1967 Hollywood Pilot The Biography of Paul Mantz Doubleday and Co Inc Garden City NY Campion John C September 1950 Paul Tuntland page 4 PDF soaringweb org Archived PDF from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 14 2022 Campion John C September 1950 Paul Tuntland page 5 PDF soaringweb org Archived PDF from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 14 2022 Retakes of Flying History Popular Science August Bonnier Corporation 1946 711 Montgomery Memorial Otay Mesa Archived 24 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine 32 577449 117 052631 Wilson Bob 1994 Starting the Montgomery Monument San Diego Aerospace Museum Newsletter Spring a b First Glider Tower Takes Initial Flight San Diego Union May 21 1950 Montgomery Waller Recreation Center City of San Diego Official Website sandiego gov Retrieved July 24 2016 Modern San Diego Dot Com modernsandiego com Archived from the original on August 7 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 813 Montgomery Hill San Jose Archived May 14 2018 at the Wayback Machine 37 302289 121 758084 Pizarro Evergreen artwork honors valley s pioneer of flight San Jose Mercury News at www mercurynews com City and County of San Francisco Board of Supervisors Municipal Record 12 no 1 1919 p 394 CAP Squadron 36 Archived from the original on May 31 2023 Retrieved August 9 2020 Home eaachapter org Retrieved July 24 2016 John J Montgomery Elementary School Chula Vista California Archived 24 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Evergreen School District Search Results eesd org Archived from the original on October 6 2007 Retrieved April 28 2015 Montgomery Middle School San Diego California Archived 2 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine Montgomery High School San Diego CA suhsd k12 ca us Archived from the original on May 27 2010 Retrieved July 24 2016 Montgomery Middle School San Diego CA suhsd k12 ca us Archived from the original on February 4 2010 Retrieved July 24 2016 Hall of Fame soaringmuseum org Archived from the original on June 21 2015 Retrieved April 28 2015 California Aviation Hall of Fame Inductees Museum of Flying March 24 2015 Retrieved April 28 2015 San Diego Air amp Space Museum Historical Balboa Park San Diego Santa Clara University School of Engineering Campus Changes scu edu Retrieved April 28 2015 Tribute to Father of Flying Planned by Bay Region San Francisco Chronicle March 11 1934 John J Montgomery Obelisk Santa Clara CA Obelisks on Waymarking com waymarking com Retrieved April 28 2015 Rhodes W T 1951 Montgomery Freeway Will Relieve Traffic in South San Diego California Highways Jan Feb 34 35 US 101 Photo Gallery gbcnet com Retrieved April 28 2015 John Joseph Montgomery 1883 Glider PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 24 2015 Retrieved March 11 2015 First High Altitude Aeroplane Flights March 1905 Aptos CA E Clampus Vitus Historical Markers on Waymarking com waymarking com Retrieved April 28 2015 John J Montgomery Father of Basic Flight 125th Anniversary Event Archived from the original on April 10 2008 Retrieved March 20 2008 Museum San Diego Air amp Space San Diego Air amp Space Museum Historical Balboa Park San Diego sandiegoairandspace org Retrieved July 28 2016 Sprekelmeyer Linda editor These We Honor The International Aerospace Hall of Fame Donning Co Publishers 2006 ISBN 978 1 57864 397 4 Crownair Aviation hangs replica Santa Clara glider in lobby Globalair com June 2 2023 Retrieved January 1 2024 Biographies editSpearman Arthur Dunning John J Montgomery Father of Basic Flying Santa Clara University 1967 and 2nd ed 1977 Harwood Craig S and Fogel Gary B Quest for Flight John J Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West University of Oklahoma Press 2012 Research archives edit John J Montgomery Collection Santa Clara University Santa Clara California John J Montgomery Personal Papers San Diego Air and Space Museum San Diego California John J Montgomery Papers 1885 1947 The Southern Historical Collection University of North Carolina Library Chapel Hill North Carolina External links editJohn J Montgomery San Diego Historical Society John J Montgomery Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum Archived April 2 2011 at the Wayback Machine Biography with photos at flyingmachines org John J Montgomery Santa Clara College Archived March 22 2006 at the Wayback Machine History of John J Montgomery s flights at Rohnerville Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine That Magnificent Man With His Flying Machine Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Joseph Montgomery amp oldid 1220048694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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