fbpx
Wikipedia

John Moisant

John Bevins Moisant (April 25, 1868 – December 31, 1910), known as the "King of Aviators," was an American aviator, aeronautical engineer, flight instructor, businessman, and revolutionary.[1] He was the first pilot to conduct passenger flights over a city (Paris), as well as across the English Channel, from Paris to London. He co-founded an eponymous flying circus, the Moisant International Aviators.[2][3][4]

John Bevins Moisant
Moisant and his cat, Mademoiselle Fifi, in 1910
Born(1868-04-25)April 25, 1868
Kankakee, Illinois, United States
DiedDecember 31, 1910(1910-12-31) (aged 42)
Harahan, Louisiana, United States
OccupationAviator
Parent(s)Medore Moisant
Josephine Fortier

Moisant funded his aviation career with proceeds from business ventures in El Salvador, where he had led two failed revolutions and coup attempts against President Figueroa in 1907 and 1909.[5]

Only months after becoming a pilot, Moisant died after being ejected from his airplane over a field just west of New Orleans, Louisiana, where he was competing for the 1910 Michelin Cup. The site of his crash is the location of Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, which was originally named Moisant Field in his memory.

Early life

 
Matilde Moisant, sister

He was born in L'Erable, Illinois to Medard Moisant (1838-1887) of St-Cyprien-de-Léry and Josephine Fortier (1841–1901).[6] Both parents were French-Canadian immigrants. His siblings include: George Moisant (1866–1927); Ann Marguerite Moisant (1877–1957); Matilde Moisant (1878–1964) who was the second American woman to receive her pilot's license; Alfred J. Moisant (1862-1929); Louisa Josephine Moisant (1882–1957); and possibly Eunice Moisant (1890-?) who was born in Illinois. Alfred and Matilde were also aviators.[2]

In 1880 the family was living in Manteno, Illinois and Moisant's father was working as a farmer. In the late 1880s, after the death of Moisant's father, the family moved to Alameda, California.[7]

El Salvador

He and his brothers moved to El Salvador in 1896 and bought sugarcane plantations that generated a substantial sum for the family. In 1909, José Santos Zelaya, president of Nicaragua asked John to go to France to investigate airplanes.

Aviation career

Early aeronautical engineering

John Moisant entered the aviation field in 1909 as a hobby, after attending the Grande Semaine d'Aviation de la Champagne air show in Reims, France in August 1909.[8] He designed and built two aircraft between August 1909 and 1910, before he became an officially licensed pilot. His first was the Moisant Biplane, alternatively known as "L'Ecrevisse", which he had built in Issy-les-Moulineaux, Paris, France.[9] This experimental aircraft constructed entirely from aluminum and steel by workers hired by Moisant from Clément-Bayard was the first all-metal aircraft in the world. This aircraft was completed in February 1910; the Moisant biplane's inaugural flight, and Moisant first flight, ultimately resulted in a crash after ascending only 90 feet with limited airtime.[10][11]

Moisant's second project, begun in January 1910, resulted in the Moisant Monoplane, alternatively known as "Le Corbeau", which was partially built out of the wreckage of L'Ecrevisse.[12][13] The alternative design had difficulty staying upright on the ground and was never flown.[14][15]

Training in France

In the spring of 1910, Moisant took four flying lessons at the Blériot School, headed by Louis Blériot, in Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France, beginning his short but distinguished flying career.[16] Later, Moisant was granted a pilot's license from the Aéro-Club de France, which he transferred to the Aero Club of America to become the thirteenth registered pilot in the United States.[17]

Significant flights and aviation records

 
A renovated version of a Blériot XI, John Moisant's French-built aircraft of choice

On August 9, 1910, Moisant flew his third flight as a pilot in his first recently purchased Blériot XI from Étampes to Issy-les-Moulineaux over Paris, landing the aircraft at the starting line of the Le Circuit de l'Est aerial time trial circuit.[18][19] Accompanying Moisant as a passenger on the flight was his mechanic, making the trip the first passenger flight over a city in the world.[18] At the time Moisant was still considered a novice pilot and had been previously denied entry into Le Circuit de l'Est competition by the Aéro-Club de France.[20] That same day, he followed this performance with an encore, flying over Paris again with Roland Garros, who would become a future member of the Moisant International Aviators flying circus, as his passenger.[18]

On August 17, 1910, he flew the first flight with a passenger across the English Channel. His passengers on the flight were Albert Fileux, his mechanic, and his cat, Mademoiselle Fifi. This feat was accomplished on Moisant's sixth flight as a pilot.[20]

Competitive events

 
Moisant as seen in flight in his Blériot XI competing in the International Aviation Meet at Belmont Park, October 30, 1910

At the International Aviation Meet at Belmont Park, New York, John Moisant flew his Blériot XI around a marker balloon 10 miles (16 kilometers) away, and returned to the racetrack in only 39 minutes, winning an $850 prize. After this initial competition, Moisant collided his brake-less Blériot into another aircraft while both were taxiing, causing it to flip over, but had repairs completed in time for the next event.[21] On October 30, 1910, at the same show, he competed in a race to fly around the Statue of Liberty. He won the race, beating Claude Grahame-White, a British aviator, by 42.75 seconds. However, he was later disqualified because officials ruled that he had started late. The $10,000 prize later went to Count Jacques de Lesseps not Grahame-White, because the latter had fouled during the race.[22]

On December 30, 1910, in New Orleans, he raced his Blériot XI five miles (eight kilometers) against a Packard automobile, but lost.[23][4]

Year Date Competition name Competition type Location Placing Winnings Description
1910 August 9–11 Le Circuit de l'Est Time Trial Circuit Jarville-la-Malgrange, Meurthe-et-Moselle, Lorraine, France DNC 0 USD Moisant's application to the competition was denied, as he had only completed two flights (one of which was in his own aircraft) at the time of the application.[24]
October 29 International Aviation Meet at Belmont Park[25] Time Trial Circuit, Gordon Bennett Cup Belmont Park, New York 2nd 5,800 USD* Finished with a time of 1 h 57 min 44.85 s
October 30 Air Race DQ Initially finished in first with a time of 34 minutes, 38.4 seconds.[26] *However, Moisant was later disqualified due to the failure to meet a rule that required one hour of flight time before the race.[27]
October 31 Distance Event 1st Completed 56 laps.
December 31 Michelin Cup[28] Endurance Flight City Park, New Orleans, Louisiana DNS 0 USD Thrown from his plane while flying to the races starting point at Harahan.

Entrepreneurship: the Moisant International Aviators

 
Moisant International Aviators

With his brother, Alfred Moisant, he formed the Moisant International Aviators, a flying circus which went barnstorming around the United States, Mexico, and Cuba.[29] Initially, John Moisant was one of the pilots in the exhibitions, along with Charles K. Hamilton, Rene Simon, Rene Barrier, J.J. Frisbie, C. Audemars, and Roland Garros.[30]

Death

 
A plane Moisant crashed in a taxiing collision on October 23, 1910

Moisant died on the morning of December 31, 1910 in an air crash near Harahan, Louisiana. He was making a preparatory flight in his attempt to win the 1910 Michelin Cup and its $4,000 prize for the longest sustained flight of the year.[31] While attempting to land at an airfield in Harahan, located about 4 miles (6.4 km) from the New Orleans city limits, Moisant was caught in a gust of wind and thrown from his Blériot XI monoplane in view of a crowd of spectators.[31][32] He fell about 25 feet to the ground and landed on his head, breaking his neck. Apparently still alive, Moisant's body was hurriedly placed aboard a nearby railroad car and driven into the city, where he was then pronounced dead.[31] The crash was later blamed on a "loss of equilibrium caused by an extra load of gasoline, placed aboard the plane for the endurance flight."[33] Fellow aviator Arch Hoxsey died the same day in a similar crash in Los Angeles.[31]

John Moisant was buried at the Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. His body was later moved to the Portal of Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation, also in Los Angeles.

Legacy

"Nine-tenths confidence and one-tenth common sense equals [a] successful aviator."

— John B. Moisant, How to Fly: The Flyer's Manual, 1917

John Moisant was one of the first to advocate for monoplanes with one set of fixed wings. Additionally, he believed in the potential of the use of aircraft in armed conflict.

Moisant's touring show was among the first in aviation, and one of the first to introduce Americans to airplanes.

Cessna

Among the people influenced by Moisant's exhibitions was aviation pioneer Clyde Cessna, who saw the Moisant troupe's 1911 performance in Oklahoma City. Cessna helped uncrate and assemble, then disassemble and re-crate, a Blériot XI monoplane used in the show. From his memory of that activity, Cessna built his first airplane—the first airplane built and flown successfully on the Great Plains by a resident... and the first of hundreds of thousands of airplanes, worldwide, that would bear the "Cessna" name. [34][35]

Cessna would become one of the United States' first major advocates of monoplanes, carrying forward Moisant's support of the then-controversial concept.[34][35]

According to some historical accounts (reportedly later disputed by Cessna, himself), Cessna went to the Queen Aeroplane Company in New York, and worked in their factory for a month, learning the art of construction of Bleriot-type monoplanes. According to these accounts, when Moisant was killed, Cessna purchased a Queen/Bleriot fuselage that was being assembled at the Queen factory for Moisant—and that became the basis for Cessna's first airplane.[34][35]

Moisant Field

The international airport of New Orleans, Louisiana was originally named Moisant Field in his honor, though it has since been renamed Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. The airport retains its "MSY" identifier, thought to be derived from "Moisant Stock Yards," and is located in suburban Kenner, only a few miles from the field where Moisant's fatal airplane crash occurred.

References

  1. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Stoff, Joshua. 1996. Picture History of Early Aviation 1903-1913. p. 72.
    • Mortimer, Gavin. 2010. Chasing Icarus: The Seventeen Days in 1910 That Forever Changed American Aviation. p. 58.
    • McLean, Jacqueline. 2001. Women With Wings. p. 23.
    • American Aviation Historical Society Journal, Volumes 7-8.
  2. ^ a b Caire, Vincent P. 2012. Louisiana Aviation: An Extraordinary History in Photographs.
  3. ^ American Aviation Historical Society Journal. 1984. Volumes 29-30.
  4. ^ a b Simmons, Thomas E. 2013. A Man Called Brown Condor: The Forgotten History of an African American Fighter Pilot.
  5. ^ Mortimer, Gavin. 2010. Chasing Icarus: The Seventeen Days in 1910 That Forever Changed American Aviation p. 59-62.
  6. ^ "United States Census, 1880, index and images, FamilySearch (accessed 29 May 2013), John Moisant in entry for Medore Moisant, 1880". FamilySearch.
  7. ^ Mortimer, Gavin. 2010. Chasing Icarus: The Seventeen Days in 1910 That Forever Changed American Aviation P.59.
  8. ^ "SIRIS - Smithsonian Institution Research Information System". siris-archives.si.edu.
  9. ^ "Shaw Communications". members.shaw.ca.
  10. ^ Rich, Doris L. 1998. The Magnificent Moisants: Champions of Early Flight. P. 37–38.
  11. ^ Flight. August 27, 1910. P. 692
  12. ^ Villard, Henry S. 1987. Contact!: The Story of Early Aviators. P. 114–115.
  13. ^ Rich, Doris L. 1998. The Magnificent Moisants: Champions of Early Flight. P. 38.
  14. ^ Villard, Henry S. 1987. Contact!: The Story of Early Aviators. P. 115.
  15. ^ Rich, Doris L. 1998. The Magnificent Moisants: Champions of Early Flight. P. 38.
  16. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Rich, Doris L. 1998. The Magnificent Moisants: Champions of Early Flight. p. 39.
    • "SOVA: Smithsonian Online Virtual Archives" (PDF). airandspace.si.edu.
    • "Dover History Scrapbook". Archived from the original on 2013-11-17. Retrieved 2013-05-27.
  17. ^ Rich, Doris. 1998. The Magnificent Moisants: Champions of Early Flight. P. 40.
  18. ^ a b c "Hopkins, Jerry. 1960. King of the Aviators. Accessed 30 May 2013".
  19. ^ Villard, Henry S. 1987. Contact!: The Story of Early Aviators. P.115.
  20. ^ a b "The Daring Mr. Moisant".
  21. ^ Joshua Stoff. Long Island aircraft crashes 1909-1959. p. 15.
  22. ^ The New York Times. 15 March 1911.
  23. ^ US Naval Institute. 1911. Proceedings. P.204.
  24. ^ "Accessed 29 May 2013". jarvillehier.free.fr.
  25. ^ The Chicago Daily News Almanac and Year Book for 1911. P.316.
  26. ^ Shaw, Albert. 1910. The American Review of Reviews. P.662.
  27. ^ Aeronautics. 1911. P. 218.
  28. ^ Widmer, Mary L. 1993. New Orleans in the twenties. P. 110.
  29. ^ "1910 Daily Journal and Tribune transcriptions". Early Aviators. 2002-03-24. from the original on 2005-12-28. Retrieved 2022-01-25.
  30. ^ Aeronautics. December, 1910.
  31. ^ a b c d "Moisant, King of Aviators, Killed". The Daily Picayune. New Orleans. January 1, 1911. pp. 1, 3.
  32. ^ Bilstein, Roger E. 2001. Flight in America: From the Wrights to the Astronauts.
  33. ^ "New Airport to be Named in John B. Moisant's Honor". The Times-Picayune. New Orleans. November 18, 1941. p. 7.
  34. ^ a b c Phillips, Edward H., in "Clyde Cessna and the Birth of a Legend," September 23, 1996, Aviation History / HistoryNet.com, retrieved August 7, 2017
  35. ^ a b c Harris, Richard, "Cessna Aircraft: History of the Maker of the World's Most Popular Airplanes," 2015-12-15 at the Wayback Machine from the author's articles appearing in InFlightUSA, Sept.-Dec., 2002 and Mar.-Apr. 2003, retrieved August 7, 2017

External links

  • Early Aviators: John Moisant
  • Archive 2005-12-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • Doug McCash, "John Moisant, aviation pioneer, died a century ago in New Orleans", Times-Picayune, December 31, 2010.
  • Moisant and Madamoiselle Fifi
  • John and Alfred Moisant Early Aviation Archive at The Historic New Orleans Collection

john, moisant, john, bevins, moisant, april, 1868, december, 1910, known, king, aviators, american, aviator, aeronautical, engineer, flight, instructor, businessman, revolutionary, first, pilot, conduct, passenger, flights, over, city, paris, well, across, eng. John Bevins Moisant April 25 1868 December 31 1910 known as the King of Aviators was an American aviator aeronautical engineer flight instructor businessman and revolutionary 1 He was the first pilot to conduct passenger flights over a city Paris as well as across the English Channel from Paris to London He co founded an eponymous flying circus the Moisant International Aviators 2 3 4 John Bevins MoisantMoisant and his cat Mademoiselle Fifi in 1910Born 1868 04 25 April 25 1868Kankakee Illinois United StatesDiedDecember 31 1910 1910 12 31 aged 42 Harahan Louisiana United StatesOccupationAviatorParent s Medore Moisant Josephine FortierMoisant funded his aviation career with proceeds from business ventures in El Salvador where he had led two failed revolutions and coup attempts against President Figueroa in 1907 and 1909 5 Only months after becoming a pilot Moisant died after being ejected from his airplane over a field just west of New Orleans Louisiana where he was competing for the 1910 Michelin Cup The site of his crash is the location of Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport which was originally named Moisant Field in his memory Contents 1 Early life 2 El Salvador 3 Aviation career 3 1 Early aeronautical engineering 3 2 Training in France 3 3 Significant flights and aviation records 3 4 Competitive events 3 5 Entrepreneurship the Moisant International Aviators 4 Death 5 Legacy 5 1 Cessna 5 2 Moisant Field 6 References 7 External linksEarly life Edit Matilde Moisant sister He was born in L Erable Illinois to Medard Moisant 1838 1887 of St Cyprien de Lery and Josephine Fortier 1841 1901 6 Both parents were French Canadian immigrants His siblings include George Moisant 1866 1927 Ann Marguerite Moisant 1877 1957 Matilde Moisant 1878 1964 who was the second American woman to receive her pilot s license Alfred J Moisant 1862 1929 Louisa Josephine Moisant 1882 1957 and possibly Eunice Moisant 1890 who was born in Illinois Alfred and Matilde were also aviators 2 In 1880 the family was living in Manteno Illinois and Moisant s father was working as a farmer In the late 1880s after the death of Moisant s father the family moved to Alameda California 7 El Salvador EditHe and his brothers moved to El Salvador in 1896 and bought sugarcane plantations that generated a substantial sum for the family In 1909 Jose Santos Zelaya president of Nicaragua asked John to go to France to investigate airplanes Aviation career EditEarly aeronautical engineering Edit John Moisant entered the aviation field in 1909 as a hobby after attending the Grande Semaine d Aviation de la Champagne air show in Reims France in August 1909 8 He designed and built two aircraft between August 1909 and 1910 before he became an officially licensed pilot His first was the Moisant Biplane alternatively known as L Ecrevisse which he had built in Issy les Moulineaux Paris France 9 This experimental aircraft constructed entirely from aluminum and steel by workers hired by Moisant from Clement Bayard was the first all metal aircraft in the world This aircraft was completed in February 1910 the Moisant biplane s inaugural flight and Moisant first flight ultimately resulted in a crash after ascending only 90 feet with limited airtime 10 11 Moisant s second project begun in January 1910 resulted in the Moisant Monoplane alternatively known as Le Corbeau which was partially built out of the wreckage of L Ecrevisse 12 13 The alternative design had difficulty staying upright on the ground and was never flown 14 15 Training in France Edit In the spring of 1910 Moisant took four flying lessons at the Bleriot School headed by Louis Bleriot in Pau Pyrenees Atlantiques France beginning his short but distinguished flying career 16 Later Moisant was granted a pilot s license from the Aero Club de France which he transferred to the Aero Club of America to become the thirteenth registered pilot in the United States 17 Significant flights and aviation records Edit A renovated version of a Bleriot XI John Moisant s French built aircraft of choice On August 9 1910 Moisant flew his third flight as a pilot in his first recently purchased Bleriot XI from Etampes to Issy les Moulineaux over Paris landing the aircraft at the starting line of the Le Circuit de l Est aerial time trial circuit 18 19 Accompanying Moisant as a passenger on the flight was his mechanic making the trip the first passenger flight over a city in the world 18 At the time Moisant was still considered a novice pilot and had been previously denied entry into Le Circuit de l Est competition by the Aero Club de France 20 That same day he followed this performance with an encore flying over Paris again with Roland Garros who would become a future member of the Moisant International Aviators flying circus as his passenger 18 On August 17 1910 he flew the first flight with a passenger across the English Channel His passengers on the flight were Albert Fileux his mechanic and his cat Mademoiselle Fifi This feat was accomplished on Moisant s sixth flight as a pilot 20 Competitive events Edit Moisant as seen in flight in his Bleriot XI competing in the International Aviation Meet at Belmont Park October 30 1910 At the International Aviation Meet at Belmont Park New York John Moisant flew his Bleriot XI around a marker balloon 10 miles 16 kilometers away and returned to the racetrack in only 39 minutes winning an 850 prize After this initial competition Moisant collided his brake less Bleriot into another aircraft while both were taxiing causing it to flip over but had repairs completed in time for the next event 21 On October 30 1910 at the same show he competed in a race to fly around the Statue of Liberty He won the race beating Claude Grahame White a British aviator by 42 75 seconds However he was later disqualified because officials ruled that he had started late The 10 000 prize later went to Count Jacques de Lesseps not Grahame White because the latter had fouled during the race 22 On December 30 1910 in New Orleans he raced his Bleriot XI five miles eight kilometers against a Packard automobile but lost 23 4 Year Date Competition name Competition type Location Placing Winnings Description1910 August 9 11 Le Circuit de l Est Time Trial Circuit Jarville la Malgrange Meurthe et Moselle Lorraine France DNC 0 USD Moisant s application to the competition was denied as he had only completed two flights one of which was in his own aircraft at the time of the application 24 October 29 International Aviation Meet at Belmont Park 25 Time Trial Circuit Gordon Bennett Cup Belmont Park New York 2nd 5 800 USD Finished with a time of 1 h 57 min 44 85 sOctober 30 Air Race DQ Initially finished in first with a time of 34 minutes 38 4 seconds 26 However Moisant was later disqualified due to the failure to meet a rule that required one hour of flight time before the race 27 October 31 Distance Event 1st Completed 56 laps December 31 Michelin Cup 28 Endurance Flight City Park New Orleans Louisiana DNS 0 USD Thrown from his plane while flying to the races starting point at Harahan Entrepreneurship the Moisant International Aviators Edit Moisant International Aviators With his brother Alfred Moisant he formed the Moisant International Aviators a flying circus which went barnstorming around the United States Mexico and Cuba 29 Initially John Moisant was one of the pilots in the exhibitions along with Charles K Hamilton Rene Simon Rene Barrier J J Frisbie C Audemars and Roland Garros 30 Death Edit A plane Moisant crashed in a taxiing collision on October 23 1910 Moisant died on the morning of December 31 1910 in an air crash near Harahan Louisiana He was making a preparatory flight in his attempt to win the 1910 Michelin Cup and its 4 000 prize for the longest sustained flight of the year 31 While attempting to land at an airfield in Harahan located about 4 miles 6 4 km from the New Orleans city limits Moisant was caught in a gust of wind and thrown from his Bleriot XI monoplane in view of a crowd of spectators 31 32 He fell about 25 feet to the ground and landed on his head breaking his neck Apparently still alive Moisant s body was hurriedly placed aboard a nearby railroad car and driven into the city where he was then pronounced dead 31 The crash was later blamed on a loss of equilibrium caused by an extra load of gasoline placed aboard the plane for the endurance flight 33 Fellow aviator Arch Hoxsey died the same day in a similar crash in Los Angeles 31 John Moisant was buried at the Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles California His body was later moved to the Portal of Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation also in Los Angeles Legacy Edit Nine tenths confidence and one tenth common sense equals a successful aviator John B Moisant How to Fly The Flyer s Manual 1917 John Moisant was one of the first to advocate for monoplanes with one set of fixed wings Additionally he believed in the potential of the use of aircraft in armed conflict Moisant s touring show was among the first in aviation and one of the first to introduce Americans to airplanes Cessna Edit Among the people influenced by Moisant s exhibitions was aviation pioneer Clyde Cessna who saw the Moisant troupe s 1911 performance in Oklahoma City Cessna helped uncrate and assemble then disassemble and re crate a Bleriot XI monoplane used in the show From his memory of that activity Cessna built his first airplane the first airplane built and flown successfully on the Great Plains by a resident and the first of hundreds of thousands of airplanes worldwide that would bear the Cessna name 34 35 Cessna would become one of the United States first major advocates of monoplanes carrying forward Moisant s support of the then controversial concept 34 35 According to some historical accounts reportedly later disputed by Cessna himself Cessna went to the Queen Aeroplane Company in New York and worked in their factory for a month learning the art of construction of Bleriot type monoplanes According to these accounts when Moisant was killed Cessna purchased a Queen Bleriot fuselage that was being assembled at the Queen factory for Moisant and that became the basis for Cessna s first airplane 34 35 Moisant Field Edit The international airport of New Orleans Louisiana was originally named Moisant Field in his honor though it has since been renamed Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport The airport retains its MSY identifier thought to be derived from Moisant Stock Yards and is located in suburban Kenner only a few miles from the field where Moisant s fatal airplane crash occurred References Edit Multiple sources Stoff Joshua 1996 Picture History of Early Aviation 1903 1913 p 72 Mortimer Gavin 2010 Chasing Icarus The Seventeen Days in 1910 That Forever Changed American Aviation p 58 McLean Jacqueline 2001 Women With Wings p 23 American Aviation Historical Society Journal Volumes 7 8 a b Caire Vincent P 2012 Louisiana Aviation An Extraordinary History in Photographs American Aviation Historical Society Journal 1984 Volumes 29 30 a b Simmons Thomas E 2013 A Man Called Brown Condor The Forgotten History of an African American Fighter Pilot Mortimer Gavin 2010 Chasing Icarus The Seventeen Days in 1910 That Forever Changed American Aviation p 59 62 United States Census 1880 index and images FamilySearch accessed 29 May 2013 John Moisant in entry for Medore Moisant 1880 FamilySearch Mortimer Gavin 2010 Chasing Icarus The Seventeen Days in 1910 That Forever Changed American Aviation P 59 SIRIS Smithsonian Institution Research Information System siris archives si edu Shaw Communications members shaw ca Rich Doris L 1998 The Magnificent Moisants Champions of Early Flight P 37 38 Flight August 27 1910 P 692 Villard Henry S 1987 Contact The Story of Early Aviators P 114 115 Rich Doris L 1998 The Magnificent Moisants Champions of Early Flight P 38 Villard Henry S 1987 Contact The Story of Early Aviators P 115 Rich Doris L 1998 The Magnificent Moisants Champions of Early Flight P 38 Multiple sources Rich Doris L 1998 The Magnificent Moisants Champions of Early Flight p 39 SOVA Smithsonian Online Virtual Archives PDF airandspace si edu Dover History Scrapbook Archived from the original on 2013 11 17 Retrieved 2013 05 27 Rich Doris 1998 The Magnificent Moisants Champions of Early Flight P 40 a b c Hopkins Jerry 1960 King of the Aviators Accessed 30 May 2013 Villard Henry S 1987 Contact The Story of Early Aviators P 115 a b The Daring Mr Moisant Joshua Stoff Long Island aircraft crashes 1909 1959 p 15 The New York Times 15 March 1911 US Naval Institute 1911 Proceedings P 204 Accessed 29 May 2013 jarvillehier free fr The Chicago Daily News Almanac and Year Book for 1911 P 316 Shaw Albert 1910 The American Review of Reviews P 662 Aeronautics 1911 P 218 Widmer Mary L 1993 New Orleans in the twenties P 110 1910 Daily Journal and Tribune transcriptions Early Aviators 2002 03 24 Archived from the original on 2005 12 28 Retrieved 2022 01 25 Aeronautics December 1910 a b c d Moisant King of Aviators Killed The Daily Picayune New Orleans January 1 1911 pp 1 3 Bilstein Roger E 2001 Flight in America From the Wrights to the Astronauts New Airport to be Named in John B Moisant s Honor The Times Picayune New Orleans November 18 1941 p 7 a b c Phillips Edward H in Clyde Cessna and the Birth of a Legend September 23 1996 Aviation History HistoryNet com retrieved August 7 2017 a b c Harris Richard Cessna Aircraft History of the Maker of the World s Most Popular Airplanes Archived 2015 12 15 at the Wayback Machine from the author s articles appearing in InFlightUSA Sept Dec 2002 and Mar Apr 2003 retrieved August 7 2017External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Moisant Wikisource has original text related to this article John Moisant Early Aviators John Moisant Moisant Aviation Archive Archived 2005 12 26 at the Wayback Machine Doug McCash John Moisant aviation pioneer died a century ago in New Orleans Times Picayune December 31 2010 Moisant and Madamoiselle Fifi John and Alfred Moisant Early Aviation Archive at The Historic New Orleans Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Moisant amp oldid 1155002921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.