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Timeline of aviation in the 19th century

This is a list of aviation-related events during the 19th century (1 January 1801 – 31 December 1900):

1800–1859 edit

 
An 1818 technical illustration shows early balloon designs.
 
A late 19th-century illustration of Gay-Lussac and Biot ascending to 4,000 m (13,000 ft) in a hot-air balloon in 1804.
 
Harris jumps from his balloon to save his fiancée. Illustration from the late 19th Century.
  • 1812
  • 1819
    • 6 July – Sophie Blanchard launches fireworks from her balloon in flight during an exhibition at the Tivoli Gardens in Paris. The fireworks ignite the gas in the balloon, which crashes on the roof of a house. She falls to her death, becoming the first woman to die in an aviation accident.[9]
  • 1824
    • 25 May – Englishman Thomas Harris dies when his balloon crashes near Carshalton. His female passenger survives. The exact cause is not determined but is apparently due to a valve Harris has designed to release gas from the balloon becoming stuck open. Despite dropping all ballast Harris is unable to stop a precipitous plunge.[10][11]
  • 1836
  • 1837
    • Robert Cocking jumps from a balloon piloted by Charles Green at a height of 2,000 m (6,600 ft) to demonstrate a parachute of his own design, and is killed in the attempt.[15]
  • 1838
    • 4 September – Charles Green, George Rush, and Edward Spencer ascend to an altitude of 19,335 feet (5,893 meters) over England in the Great Balloon of Nassau before landing at Thaxted.
    • 10 September – Green and Rush ascend to a world record altitude of 27,146 feet (8,274 meters) over England in the Great Balloon of Nassau, reaching speeds of 80 to 100 mph (130 to 160 km/h) during the flight.
  • 1839
    • The American John Wise introduces the ripping panel which is still used today. The panel solved the problem of the balloon dragging along the ground at landing and needing to be stopped with the help of anchors.[16]
    • Charles Green and the astronomer Spencer Rush ascend to 7,900 m (25,900 ft) in a free balloon.
 
Francisque Arban is rescued by Italian fishermen, 1846. Illustration from the late 19th century.
  • 1840
  • 1842
    • November – English engineer William Samuel Henson makes the first complete drawing of a power-driven aeroplane with steam-engine drive. The patent follows the works of Cayley. The English House of Commons rejects the motion for the formation of an "Aerial Transport Company" with great laughter.
  • 1843
  • 1845
    • William Samuel Henson and John Stringfellow build a steam-powered model aircraft, with a wingspan of 10 ft (3.0 m).
  • 1846
    • French balloonist Francisque Arban makes his twelfth flight from Rome in April, and is rescued from the sea after a flight from Trieste later in the year.
  • 1848
  • 1849
    • 12–25 July – While blockading Venice, the Austrians launch unmanned incendiary balloons equipped with explosive charges from land and as well as from the steamship SMS Vulcano in an attempt to bombard Venice. Although the experiment is mostly unsuccessful, it is both the first use of balloons for bombardment and the first time a warship makes offensive use of an aerial device.[19]
    • 2–3 September – French balloonist Francisque Arban makes the first (and until 1924 only) balloon flight over the Alps, flying a hydrogen balloon from Marseille to Turin.
    • 7 October – Francisque Arban takes off from Barcelona, but his balloon is blown over the Mediterranean Sea and is lost.
    • Sir George Cayley launches a 10-year-old boy in a small glider being towed by a team of people running down a hill. This is the first known flight by a person in a heavier-than-air machine.[20]
  • 1852
    • 24 September – French engineer Henri Giffard flies 27 km (17 mi) from the Paris Hippodrome to Trappes in a steam-powered dirigible,[21] reaching a speed of about 10 km/h (6.2 mph).
  • 1853
    • Late June or early July – Sir George Cayley's coachman successfully flies a glider, designed by his employer, some proportion of the distance across Brompton Dale in Yorkshire, becoming the world's first adult aeroplane pilot.[22] Unimpressed with this honour, the coachman promptly resigns his employment.
  • 1855
    • First use of the word "aeroplane", in a paper by Joseph Pline.[23]
  • 1856
    • December – French Captain Jean Marie Le Bris is towed into the air in his Artificial Albatross glider, flying 600 ft (180 m).
  • 1857
    • Félix Du Temple flies clockwork and steam-powered model aircraft, the first sustained powered flights by heavier-than-air machines.
    • French brothers du Temple de la Croix apply after successful attempts with models for a patent for a power-driven aeroplane.
  • 1858
    • John Wise and three companions complete a Montgolfière flight over a distance of 802 miles (1,291 km) from St. Louis to Henderson[clarification needed]
    • French airman Nadar takes the first aerial photographs.[24]

1860s edit

  • 1860
    • 13 October – Ascending in Samuel Archer King's balloon The Queen of the Air, James Wallace Black takes eight photographs of Boston from an altitude of 1,200 ft (370 m). The single clear print is the first successful aerial photograph in the United States and the first clear aerial photograph of a city ever taken anywhere.[25]
  • 1861
  • 1862
  • 1863
  • 1864
    • Outbreak of the Paraguayan War between the Alliance of Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay against Paraguay. The Alliance forces made much use of balloon reconnaissance over the next six years.
    • English philosopher-scientist Matthew Piers Watt Boulton of the UK writes his short paper, On Aerial Locomotion, detailing several inventions, including that of the aileron almost as an afterthought (he later patents them in 1868). Boulton's inspiration has been attributed to French Count Ferdinand Charles Honore Phillipe d'Esterno, whose detailed analysis of flapping and soaring bird flight, Du Vol des Oiseaux (On the flight of birds) was published as a pamphlet in 1864.[33]
  • 1865
    • Solomon Andrews flies a dirigible twice over New York City.
    • German experimenter Paul Haenlein takes out a patent for the "Earliest Known Airship With a Semi-rigid Frame," envisioned to have a coal-gas-burning engine which draws its fuel from the craft's envelope, which is filled with coal gas. He later will construct the craft in Germany.[34]
    • Jules Verne describes in his novel The Journey to the Moon the launch of a rocket from Florida, from which many years later American space flights actually will start.
    • The Frenchman Le Comte Ferdinand Charles Honore Phillipe d'Esterno writes in his book About the Flight of Birds, "Gliding seems to be characteristic for heavy birds; there are no odds which are stacked against that humans can not do the same at fair wind." He had earlier published the 1864 pamphlet Du Vol des Oiseaux (On the flight of birds).[33]
    • French artist and farmer Louis Pierre Mouillard makes a tentative gliding flight. After years of studies of bird flight he publishes his book L'Empire de l'Air in 1881. He thinks that imitation of gliding and soaring flight of birds is possible, but not the imitation of the flapping of wings.
    • 20 September – Jacob Brodbeck, in his coil-spring-driven airship, flies 100 feet before crashing in a field near Luckenbach, Texas.[35]
  • 1866
    • First South American military balloon reconnaissance ascent. On 6 July, Lieutenant Colonel Roberto A. Chodasiewicz, an Argentine Army military engineer, makes the first South American military observation ascent, manning a Brazilian Army's captive ballon over Paraguayan troops, during the Paraguayan War.
    • Foundation (12 January in London) of the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain later to become the Royal Aeronautical Society, the world's oldest society devoted to all aspects of aeronautics and astronautics.[36]
    • Francis Herbert Wenham, British, presents his paper on "Aerial Locomotion" to the RAeS. Patented superposed wing design (biplane, multiplane).
    • Jan Wnęk claims gliding flights (1866–1869) from the Odporyszów church tower.[37] Kraków Museum of Ethnography, the source of claims of documentary evidence, refuse to allow independent researchers access to these.
    • First exhibition of aviation in London's Crystal Palace.
  • 1868
  • 1869

1870–1889 edit

  • 1870
    • Balloons are used by the French to transport letters and passengers out of besieged Paris during the Franco-Prussian War. Between September 1870 and January 1871, 66 flights – of which 58 land safely – carry 110 passengers and up to three million letters out of Paris, as well as 500 carrier pigeons to deliver messages back to Paris.[39] One balloon accidentally sets a world distance record by ending up off the coast of Norway.[40]
  • 1871
    • The Englishmen Wenham and Browning construct the first wind tunnel and conduct airflow experiments.
    • Alphonse Pénaud flies his Planophore, a small rubber-powered model which is designed to have automatic pitch and roll stability.[41]
  • 1872
  • 1873
    • The New York Daily Graphic sponsors the first attempt in history to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, using a 400,000-cubic-foot (11,000 m3) balloon carrying a lifeboat. The attempt is abandoned when the balloon rips and collapses during inflation.[25]
  • 1874
    • 20 September – Felix and Louis du Temple de la Croix build a piloted steam-powered monoplane which achieves a short hop after gaining speed by rolling down a ramp.[43]
  • 1875
    • Englishman Thomas Moy tests a tethered aeroplane with a wing span of 4 metres (13 feet) powered by a steam engine.[44]
    • German experimenter Paul Haenlein improves his airship by providing it with a car suspended below its framework to accommodate the crew and engine. This will become a standard practice in the design of later dirigibles.[45]
    • 15 April – In the balloon Zénith [fr], the French Navy officer Théodore Sivel [fr], the French journalist Joseph Crocé-Spinelli [fr], and the French scientist and editor Gaston Tissandier ascend to a record altitude of 8,600 metres (28,200 feet). Hypoxia kills Sivel and Crocé-Spinelli during the flight and leaves Tissandier deaf.[14]
  • 1876
 
Experimental helicopter by Enrico Forlanini (1877) (Museo nazionale della scienza e della tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci, Milan)
  • 1877
  • 1878
  • 1879
    • The British Army gains its first balloon, the Pioneer.
    • Frenchman Victor Tatin builds a power-driven model aeroplane with airscrews and a compressed air motor, successfully flying it off the ground.
    • American scientist Edmund Clarence Stedman proposes a rigid airship inspired by the anatomy of a fish, with a framework of steel, brass, or copper tubing and a tractor propeller mounted on the front of the envelope, later changed to an engine with two propellers suspended beneath the framework. The airship never is built, but Stedman's design foreshadows that of the Zeppelins of World War I.[48]
    • Biot makes short hops in the Biot-Massia glider.
  • 1880
  • 1882
  • 1883
    • M.A. Goupil proposes a steam-powered monoplane with tractor propeller. His full-size test rig lifts itself and two men in a light breeze, but the design is never built.
    • The first electric-powered flight is made by Gaston Tissandier who fits a Siemens AG electric motor to a dirigible. Airships with electric engines (Tissandier brothers, Renard and Krebs).
    • Wölfert unsuccessfully tests a balloon powered by a hand-cranked propeller
    • The Berlin-based "German Society for Promoting Aviation" publishes a magazine, the "Zeitschrift für Luftschiffahrt" (Magazine of Aviation).
 
The 1884 Krebs & Renard first fully controllable free-flights with the LA FRANCE electric dirigible near Paris (Krebs arch.)
 
The astronomer Jules Janssen took this photo of La France dirigible of the French officers Charles Renard and Arthur Krebs from his Meudon astrophysic observatory in 1885.
  • 1884
  • 1885
    • The Prussian Airship Arm (Preussische Luftschiffer Abteilung) becomes a permanent unit of the army.
    • The British Army deploys observation balloons in Sudan to take part in the expedition to Suakin during the Mahdist War.[30]
    • Frenchmen Hervé and Alluard achieve a hot air balloon flight of over 24 hours.
    • John J. Montgomery experiments with a second glider in California.[53][54][57]
  • 1886
    • John J. Montgomery conducts studies on the flow of water and air over angles surfaces and experiments with a third glider in California.[58][59]
  • 1887
  • 1888
    • Wölfert flies a petrol powered dirigible at Seelburg, the first use of a petrol-fuelled engine for aviation purposes. The engine was built by Gottlieb Daimler.[61]
    • 4 July – Clara Van Tassel makes the first parachute jump by a woman in the western United States at Los Angeles from a balloon operated by her husband Park Van Tassel.[62]
  • 1889
    • Percival G. Spencer makes a successful parachute jump from a balloon at Drumcondra, Ireland
    • Otto Lilienthal publishes in his book Der Vogelflug als Grundlage der Fliegekunst (Bird Flight as the Basis for the Art of Aviation) measurements on wings, so called polar diagrams, which are the concept of description of artificial wings even today. The book gives a reference for the advantages of the arched wing.
    • Pichancourt develops a mechanical bird which aimed to imitate the motion of a bird's wings in flight.
    • Lawrence Hargrave, a British immigrant to Australia, constructs a rotary engine driven by compressed air.
    • A British Army observation balloon section takes part in the Army Manoeuvres at Aldershot.[30]

1890–1900 edit

 
Patent drawing of Ader's Eole
 
Otto Lilienthal in flight, ca. 1895
  • 1890
    • The British Army establishes a Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers, commanded by Lieutenant H. B. Jones. A balloon factory and a ballooning school support the new section.[30]
    • 9 October – The first brief flight of Clément Ader's steam-powered fixed-wing aircraft Eole takes place in Satory, France. It flies uncontrolled approximately 50 metres (160 feet) at a height of 20 cm (7.9 in) before crashing, but it is the first take-off of a powered airplane solely under its own power.[63][64][65][66]
  • 1891
    • Otto Lilienthal flies about 25 m (82 ft) in his Derwitzer Glider.
    • Clément Ader makes a second flight in Eole, an uncontrolled 100-meter (330-foot) hop that ends in a crash. Ader later will experiment with an even less successful twin-engined steam-powered aircraft before giving up his aircraft experiments.[66]
    • 29 April – Chuhachi Ninomiya flies the first model airplane in Japan, a rubber-band-powered monoplane with a four-bladed pusher propeller and three-wheeled landing gear. It makes flights of 3 and 10 meters (9.8 and 32.8 ft). The next day it flies 36 metres (118 feet).[67]
  • 1892
    • February – The first contract is awarded for the construction of a military airplane: Clément Ader is contracted by the French War Ministry to build a two-seater aircraft to be used as a bomber, capable of lifting a 75-kilogram (165-pound) bombload.[68]
    • August – Clément Ader later claims to have made an uncontrolled flight of 200 metres (660 feet) in the Avion II (also referred to as the Zephyr or Éole II) at a field in Satory in this month.
    • Otto Lilienthal flies over 82 metres (90 yards) in his Südende-Glider.
    • Austria-Hungary's army gains a permanent air corps, the Kaiserlich und Königliche Militäraeronautische Anstalt ("Imperial and Royal Military Aeronautical Group")
  • 1893
    • Otto Lilienthal flies about 250 m (820 ft) in his Maihöhe-Rhinow-Glider.
    • Lawrence Hargrave demonstrates a human-carrying glider in Australia at an aeronautical congress in Sydney. It is based on the box kite, an invention of Hargrave's. It becomes an example for several scientific kites and aeroplane constructions.
    • British Army Captain Baden Baden-Powell begins experiments with man-lifting kites.[69]
    • Horatio Phillips builds a steam-powered test rig at Harrow. A "venetian blind" style multiplane with a stack of wings each with a span of 5.8 metres (19 ft) and a chord of only 4 cm (1.5 in). Tethered to the centre of a circular track, its rear wheels rose 60–90 cm (2.0–3.0 ft) while front wheels remained on ground.[70]
  • 1894
    • Czeslaw Tanski successfully flies powered models in Poland and begins work on full-size gliders.
    • Railway engineer Octave Chanute publishes Progress in Flying Machines, describing the research completed so far into flight. Chanute's book, a summary of many articles published in the "American Engineer and Railroad Journal", is a comprehensive account on the stage of development worldwide on the way to the aeroplane.
    • Otto Lilienthal's Normal soaring apparatus is the first serial production of a glider. Using different aircraft constructions he covers distances of up to 250 metres (820 ft).
    • The British Army forms a kiting section for the operation of man-lifting kites within the Royal Engineers.[69]
    • 31 July – Hiram Maxim launches an enormous biplane test rig with a wingspan of 32 m (105 ft) propelled by two steam engines. It lifts off and engages the restraining rails, which prevent it from leaving the track.[65]
    • November – Lawrence Hargrave demonstrates stable flight with a tethered box kite.
    • 4 December – German meteorologist and Aerologist Arthur Berson ascends to 9,155 metres (30,036 feet) in a balloon, setting a new world altitude record for human flight.
  • 1895
  • 1896
    • 6 May – Samuel Pierpont Langley flies the unmanned Aerodrome No. 5 from a houseboat on the Potomac River a distance of 3,300 ft (1,000 m), the first truly successful flight of one of his powered models.[73]
    • June – Octave Chanute organises a flyer camp at Lake Michigan during which both a copy of one of Lilienthal's designs and a biplane built by Chanute are tested.[74]
    • 9 August – Otto Lilienthal crashes after a stall caused by a gust, breaking his back. He dies the following day.[75]
    • October – Ground testing of an all-aluminium airship designed by the Austro-Hungarian engineer David Schwarz and built by Carl Berg, begins in Berlin. Schwarz will die of a heart attack before seeing it fly.[76]
    • November – Samuel Pierpont Langley flies the unmanned Aerodrome No. 6 a distance of 4,200 ft (1,300 m).
    • Germans August von Parseval and Hans Bartsch von Sigsfeld invent the kite balloon for observations in strong winds.
    • William Paul Butusov, a Russian immigrant to U.S, with the Chanute group, construct the Albatross Soaring Machine which achieves an unmanned unpowered uncontrolled hop from a ramp.
    • William Frost, Welsh, flies the Frost Airship Glider 500 meters, possibly with balloon assist.
  • 1897
    • 11 June – Salomon Andrée, Nils Strindberg, and Knut Frænkel attempt an expedition to the North Pole by free balloon from Spitsbergen. They crash within three days but manage to survive for several months in the pack ice. Their remains are discovered in 1930 on White Island. It was possible to develop the preserved film material.[77]
    • 12 June – Friedrich Hermann Wölfert and his mechanic are killed when their petrol-powered airship catches fire during a demonstration at the Tempelhof field.[78]
    • 14 October – Clément Ader later asserts that on this date he made a 300 m (980 ft) flight in his steam-powered uncontrolled Avion III also referred to as Aquilon or the Éole III. His claim is disputed. The French Army is not impressed and withdraws funding.
    • 3 November – The first flight in a rigid airship is made by Ernst Jägels, flying the all-aluminium craft designed by David Schwarz and built by Carl Berg. It reaches an altitude of 24 m (79 ft), proving metal-framed airships can become airborne, but after an engine failure is damaged beyond repair in an emergency landing.[79]
    • Carl Rickard Nyberg starts working on his Flugan.
  • 1898
  • 1899
    • The Hague Convention of 1899 prohibits military aircraft from discharging projectiles and explosives, but permits the wartime use of aircraft for reconnaissance and other purposes.[84]
    • The Wright brothers begin experimenting with wing-warping as a means of controlling an aircraft.
    • Samuel Cody begins experiments with kites big enough to lift a person.
    • Percy Pilcher flies various gliders and is close to completing a powered machine but is killed when his glider crashes at Stanford Hall, England after a tail strut fails. Pilcher used a team of horses to pull the glider into the air.[85]
    • 22 November – The first of three British Army observation balloon sections arrives in South Africa to take part in the Second Boer War. The war will see the first large-scale use of observation balloons by the British armed forces.[86]
    • 11 December – A British Army observation balloon section takes part in the Battle of Magersfontein during the Second Boer War.[86]
  • 1900
    • February – In the Second Boer War, a British Army observation balloon section takes part in the relief of Ladysmith.[86]
    • 2 July – Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin pilots his experimental first Zeppelin, LZ 1, over Lake Constance, reaching an altitude of 400 metres (1,300 feet) with five men on board. Although the flight lasts only 18 minutes, covers only 5.6 kilometers (3.5 mi), and ends in an emergency landing on the lake, it is the first flight of a truly successful rigid airship.[87]
    • 12 September – The Wright brothers arrive at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, to begin their first season of glider experiments there.[88]
    • 3 October – Probably on this date, Wilbur Wright makes the Wright brothers' first glider flight at Kitty Hawk. During their tests, they will fly the 1900 glider both as a glider and as a kite under various wind conditions.[89]
    • 17 October – On her second flight, the Zeppelin LZ 1 remains aloft for 80 minutes.[90]
    • 23 October – The Wright brothers abandon their 1900 glider in a sand hollow and break camp at Kitty Hawk to return home to Dayton, Ohio.[91]
    • November – The British Army's observation balloon section's duty in the Second Boer War comes to an end. It is ordered home from South Africa because the Boers have switched to guerrilla tactics, making the balloons unsuitable for supporting British operations.[86]

Births edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Garnerin's Balloon". The Times. No. 5455. London. 6 July 1802. col B, p. 2.
  2. ^ "Napoleon's Coronation as Emperor of the French". Georgian Index. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
  3. ^ a b Layman 1989, p. 31.
  4. ^ Hallion 2003, p.74.
  5. ^ a b Gibbs-Smith 2003, p. 35.
  6. ^ Hallion 2003, p. 75.
  7. ^ a b Gibbs-Smith 2003 p. 39.
  8. ^ Probst, Ernst (August 2010). Königinnen der Lüfte in Europa. GRIN Verlag. pp. 197–210. ISBN 978-3-640-68876-0.
  9. ^ a b Shtashower, Daniel, "Book review: ‘Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air’ by Richard Holmes," washingtonpost.com, December 13, 2013.
  10. ^ "1824 Death Of Lieut. Thomas Harris At Beddington Park, Croydon". The Aeronautical Journal. 33. Royal Aeronautical Society. 1929.
  11. ^ . Time. 21 August 1933. Archived from the original on November 24, 2009.
  12. ^ The Times (16261). London: 5. 15 November 1896. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. ^ Shtashower, Daniel, "The First to Float Above the World," The Washington Post, December 15, 2013, p. B3 (illustration caption).
  14. ^ a b c century-of-flight.net Balloons to the Stratosphere
  15. ^ Holmes 2014, p. 75
  16. ^ Holmes 2014, p. 102
  17. ^ Milberry, Larry (1979). "The Early Days:1840-1914". Aviation in Canada. McGraw-Hill Ryerson. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-07-082778-3.
  18. ^ "Henson and Stringfellow". Flight. 24 February 1956 – via Flight Global.
  19. ^ Layman 1989, p. 13.
  20. ^ Lewis 1962, p.178.
  21. ^ Whitehouse, Arch, The Zeppelin Fighters, New York: Ace Books, 1966, p. 14.
  22. ^ Lewis 1962, p. 178.
  23. ^ Kundu, Ajoy Kumar (2010). Aircraft Design. Cambridge University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-139-48745-0.
  24. ^ Holmes 2014, p.156
  25. ^ a b Infoplease: Famous Firsts in Aviation
  26. ^ a b c Layman 1989, p. 14.
  27. ^ Layman, R.D., 1989 pp. 115-116.
  28. ^ The Magnetic Telegraph Company: Telegram from Balloon Enterprise to the President of the United States, 16 June 1861
  29. ^ Layman 1989, p. 115.
  30. ^ a b c d e rafmuseum.org.uk "Early Military Ballooning"
  31. ^ a b c d e Layman 1989, p. 116.
  32. ^ Holmes 2014, pp. 213-5
  33. ^ a b Harrison, James P. Mastering the Sky: A History of Aviation from Ancient Times to the Present, Da Capo Press, 2000, p. 48, ISBN 978-1885119681.
  34. ^ Whitehouse 1966, p. 14.
  35. ^ Texas Less Travelled: The Brodbeck Airship
  36. ^ "History of the Society". Royal Aeronautical Society.
  37. ^ Kulawik, Piotr. [Jan Wnęk, the hero in the vault of heaven] (in French). Archived from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  38. ^ Harwood, Craig S. and Fogel, Gary B., Quest for Flight: John J. Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West, Norman, Okla.; University of Oklahoma Press, 2012, p. 14.
  39. ^ Loving, Matthew, "Bullets and Balloons," MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History, Autumn 2011, p. 17.
  40. ^ Lienhard, John H. (1988–1997). "The Siege of Paris". Engines of Our Ingenuity. Retrieved 2014-05-15.
  41. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p.56.
  42. ^ "Henri Dupuy de Lôme". The Lighter Than Air Society. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  43. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2002, p. 59.
  44. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p. 61.
  45. ^ Whitehouse 1966 p. 14.
  46. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p. 57.
  47. ^ Francillon, René J., Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1979, ISBN 0-87021-313-X, p. 29.
  48. ^ Whitehouse, Arch, The Zeppelin Fighters, New York: Ace Books, 1966, p. 15.
  49. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p. 66.
  50. ^ Fogel, Gary B. Sky Rider: Park Van Tassel and the Rise of Ballooning in the West, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press, 2021, p. 5.
  51. ^ Hallion 2003, p. 87.
  52. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003 p.67.
  53. ^ a b Richard J. Montgomery, response to Questions #22 and #24, January 14, 1919, in Equity No. 33852 (John J. Montgomery Collection, Santa Clara University Archives and Special Collections).
  54. ^ a b Affidavit of Charles Burroughs, dated February 26, 1920.
  55. ^ Layman 1989, p. 91.
  56. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p. 68.
  57. ^ Zachariah Montgomery to Richard Montgomery, August 6, 1885 (John J. Montgomery Collection, Santa Clara University Archives and Special Collections)
  58. ^ John J. Montgomery to Margaret H. Montgomery, December 23, 1885
  59. ^ Montgomery, John J., 1910 "The Origin of Warping: Professor Montgomery's Experiments," Aeronautics (London) Vol. 3, No 5, pp. 63-64.
  60. ^ Fogel, Gary B. Sky Rider: Park Van Tassel and the Rise of Ballooning in the West, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press, 2021, p. 40.
  61. ^ Hallion 2003, p. 89.
  62. ^ Fogel, Gary B. Sky Rider: Park Van Tassel and the Rise of Ballooning in the West, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press, 2021, p. 53.
  63. ^ Crouch, Tom D. "Clément Ader". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  64. ^ Gray, Carroll (1998–2003). "Clement Ader 1841–1925". Flying Machines. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  65. ^ a b Gibbs-Smith, Charles H. (1959). "Hops and Flights: A Roll Call of Early Powered Take-offs". Flight. 75: 468. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  66. ^ a b Macintyre, Donald, Aircraft Carrier: The Majestic Weapon, New York: Ballantine Books Inc., 1968, p. 8.
  67. ^ Francillon, René J., Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1979, ISBN 0-87021-313-X, p. 1.
  68. ^ Crosby, Francis, The Complete Guide to Fighters & Bombers of the World: An Illustrated History of the World's Greatest Military Aircraft, From the Pioneering Days of Air Fighting in World War I Through the Jet Fighters and Stealth Bombers of the Present Day, London: Anness Publishing Ltd., 2006, ISBN 978-1-84476-917-9, p. 16.
  69. ^ a b rafmuseum.org.uk Kiting
  70. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p.84
  71. ^ Lewis 1962, p.397.
  72. ^ Layman 1989 p. 85.
  73. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p.80
  74. ^ Hallion 2003, p.175.
  75. ^ Hallion 2003, p.161.
  76. ^ Phythyon, John R. Jr., Great War at Sea: Zeppelins, Virginia Beach, Virginia: Avalanche Press, Inc., 2007, pp. 5, 43.
  77. ^ Hallion 2003 p. 79
  78. ^ Robinson 1973 p. 3.
  79. ^ Robinson 1973, pp.5-6.
  80. ^ Butler, Glen, Col., USMC, "That Other Air Service Centennial," Naval History, June 2012, p. 54.
  81. ^ Robinson 1973, p.5.
  82. ^ Gibbs-Smith 2003, p. 87.
  83. ^ Layman 1989 p. 17.
  84. ^ Whitehouse 1966, p. 32.
  85. ^ Lewis 1962, p.399.
  86. ^ a b c d rafmuseum.org.uk The Boer War
  87. ^ Cross, Wilbur, Zeppelins of World War I, New York: Barnes & Noble, 1991. ISBN 1-56619-390-7, pp. 1-4.
  88. ^ Crouch 1989, p. 186.
  89. ^ Crouch 1989, p. 189.
  90. ^ Phythyon, John R., Jr., Great War at Sea: Zeppelins, Virginia Beach, Virginia: Avalanche Press, Inc., 2007, p. 5.
  91. ^ Crouch 1989, p. 199.
  92. ^ Barr, Linda (2004). Bessie Coleman: Pioneer Pilot. Columbus, Ohio: Zaner-Bloser. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-73672-039-7.

References edit

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Timeline of aviation in the 19th century news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Timelineof aviation pre 18th century 18th century 19th century 20th century 21st century begins Aviation portal This is a list of aviation related events during the 19th century 1 January 1801 31 December 1900 Contents 1 1800 1859 2 1860s 3 1870 1889 4 1890 1900 5 Births 6 Notes 7 References1800 1859 edit nbsp An 1818 technical illustration shows early balloon designs nbsp A late 19th century illustration of Gay Lussac and Biot ascending to 4 000 m 13 000 ft in a hot air balloon in 1804 1802 5 July Andre Jacques Garnerin and Edward Hawke Locker make a 17 mile 27 km balloon flight from Lord s Cricket Ground in St John s Wood to Chingford in just over 15 minutes 1 2 December A manned illuminated balloon is launched from the front of Notre Dame de Paris during the Coronation of Napoleon I 2 1803 British Rear Admiral Charles Knowles proposes to the Admiralty that the Royal Navy loft an observation balloon from a ship in order to reconnoitre French preparations for the invasion of Britain in Brest The proposal is ignored 3 18 July Etienne Gaspar Robertson and his copilot Lhoest ascend from Hamburg Germany to an altitude of around 7 300 m 24 000 ft in a balloon 4 3 4 October Andre Jacques Garnerin covers a distance of 395 km 245 mi from Paris to Clausen Germany 7 8 October Francesco Zambeccari and Pasquale Andreoli make a balloon flight which crashes into the Adriatic Sea 1804 Sir George Cayley builds a model glider with a main wing and separate adjustable vertical and horizontal tail surfaces 5 August September The scientists Joseph Louis Gay Lussac and Jean Baptiste Biot use a balloon to conduct experiments on the Earth s magnetic field and the composition of the upper atmosphere 6 23 August Francesco Zambeccari and Pasquale Andreoli make a second balloon flight which crashes into the Adriatic Sea 1806 Lord Cochrane flies kites from the Royal Navy 32 gun frigate HMS Pallas to spread propaganda leaflets along the coast of France It is the first use of an aerial device in European maritime warfare 3 1807 Jakob Degen a clockmaker from Vienna experiments with an ornithopter with flap valve wings 7 1809 Degen propels a hydrogen filled balloon by flapping large ornithopter style wings 7 September Sir George Cayley publishes the first part of his seminal paper On Aerial Navigation setting out for the first time the scientific principles of heavier than air flight 5 1810 September Frenchwoman Sophie Blanchard makes a flight starting from Frankfurt making her the first woman to fly in a balloon in Germany Chemist Johann Gottfried Reichard makes his first flight in a self constructed gas balloon from Berlin making him the second person to fly in a gas balloon in Germany 8 1811 16 April Wilhelmine Reichard makes her first solo flight starting in Berlin making her the first native German woman to fly in a balloon 31 May Albrecht Berblinger crashes a hang glider possibly a copy of Degen s citation needed into the Danube A reproduction built according to the design drawing in 1986 is capable of flight nbsp Harris jumps from his balloon to save his fiancee Illustration from the late 19th Century 1812 21 September Francesco Zambeccari dies when his balloon catches fire on landing 1819 6 July Sophie Blanchard launches fireworks from her balloon in flight during an exhibition at the Tivoli Gardens in Paris The fireworks ignite the gas in the balloon which crashes on the roof of a house She falls to her death becoming the first woman to die in an aviation accident 9 1824 25 May Englishman Thomas Harris dies when his balloon crashes near Carshalton His female passenger survives The exact cause is not determined but is apparently due to a valve Harris has designed to release gas from the balloon becoming stuck open Despite dropping all ballast Harris is unable to stop a precipitous plunge 10 11 1836 7 8 November Flight of a coal gas balloon named The Great Balloon of Nassau by Charles Green covering 722 km 449 mi from London to Weilburg Germany in 18 hours with passengers Robert Hollond and Thomas Monck Mason 12 It is the first overnight balloon flight 13 14 and it sets a world ballooning distance record that will stand until 1907 in aviation 1907 1837 Robert Cocking jumps from a balloon piloted by Charles Green at a height of 2 000 m 6 600 ft to demonstrate a parachute of his own design and is killed in the attempt 15 1838 4 September Charles Green George Rush and Edward Spencer ascend to an altitude of 19 335 feet 5 893 meters over England in the Great Balloon of Nassau before landing at Thaxted 10 September Green and Rush ascend to a world record altitude of 27 146 feet 8 274 meters over England in the Great Balloon of Nassau reaching speeds of 80 to 100 mph 130 to 160 km h during the flight 1839 The American John Wise introduces the ripping panel which is still used today The panel solved the problem of the balloon dragging along the ground at landing and needing to be stopped with the help of anchors 16 Charles Green and the astronomer Spencer Rush ascend to 7 900 m 25 900 ft in a free balloon nbsp Francisque Arban is rescued by Italian fishermen 1846 Illustration from the late 19th century 1840 Louis Anslem Lauriat makes the first manned flight in Canada at Saint John New Brunswick in his balloon Star of the East 17 1842 November English engineer William Samuel Henson makes the first complete drawing of a power driven aeroplane with steam engine drive The patent follows the works of Cayley The English House of Commons rejects the motion for the formation of an Aerial Transport Company with great laughter 1843 William Samuel Henson and John Stringfellow file articles of incorporation for the world s first air transport company the Aerial Transit Company 1845 William Samuel Henson and John Stringfellow build a steam powered model aircraft with a wingspan of 10 ft 3 0 m 1846 French balloonist Francisque Arban makes his twelfth flight from Rome in April and is rescued from the sea after a flight from Trieste later in the year 1848 John Stringfellow flies a powered monoplane model a few dozen feet in a powered glide at an exhibition at Cremorne Gardens in London 18 1849 12 25 July While blockading Venice the Austrians launch unmanned incendiary balloons equipped with explosive charges from land and as well as from the steamship SMS Vulcano in an attempt to bombard Venice Although the experiment is mostly unsuccessful it is both the first use of balloons for bombardment and the first time a warship makes offensive use of an aerial device 19 2 3 September French balloonist Francisque Arban makes the first and until 1924 only balloon flight over the Alps flying a hydrogen balloon from Marseille to Turin 7 October Francisque Arban takes off from Barcelona but his balloon is blown over the Mediterranean Sea and is lost Sir George Cayley launches a 10 year old boy in a small glider being towed by a team of people running down a hill This is the first known flight by a person in a heavier than air machine 20 1852 24 September French engineer Henri Giffard flies 27 km 17 mi from the Paris Hippodrome to Trappes in a steam powered dirigible 21 reaching a speed of about 10 km h 6 2 mph 1853 Late June or early July Sir George Cayley s coachman successfully flies a glider designed by his employer some proportion of the distance across Brompton Dale in Yorkshire becoming the world s first adult aeroplane pilot 22 Unimpressed with this honour the coachman promptly resigns his employment 1855 First use of the word aeroplane in a paper by Joseph Pline 23 1856 December French Captain Jean Marie Le Bris is towed into the air in his Artificial Albatross glider flying 600 ft 180 m 1857 Felix Du Temple flies clockwork and steam powered model aircraft the first sustained powered flights by heavier than air machines French brothers du Temple de la Croix apply after successful attempts with models for a patent for a power driven aeroplane 1858 John Wise and three companions complete a Montgolfiere flight over a distance of 802 miles 1 291 km from St Louis to Henderson clarification needed French airman Nadar takes the first aerial photographs 24 1860s edit1860 13 October Ascending in Samuel Archer King s balloon The Queen of the Air James Wallace Black takes eight photographs of Boston from an altitude of 1 200 ft 370 m The single clear print is the first successful aerial photograph in the United States and the first clear aerial photograph of a city ever taken anywhere 25 1861 The first use of observation balloons in naval warfare takes place during the American Civil War 1861 1865 26 The United States Navy barge George Washington Parke Custis becomes the first ship configured to conduct air operations transporting and towing observation balloons along the Potomac River She continues these operations into early 1862 27 16 June Floating 500 ft 150 m above the National Mall in Washington D C the balloon Enterprise with a telegraph key wired directly to the White House Thaddeus Lowe sends a telegram to President Abraham Lincoln to demonstrate the value of balloons in military reconnaissance It is the first telegram to be sent from the air 9 28 The Union Army Balloon Corps will be formed under Lowe s command for observation and artillery direction and balloons will see major use in the American Civil War over the next four years 3 August The United States Army steamship Fanny becomes the first ship to loft a captive manned balloon when a civilian aeronaut John La Mountain ascends from her deck to observe Confederate military positions at Hampton Roads Virginia He ascends again a few days later either from Fanny or a ship named Adriatic 29 1862 With the permission of the British War Office British Army Captain F Beaumont and Lieutenant George Grover perform observation balloon trials at Aldershot assisted by the civilian aeronaut Henry Tracey Coxwell It is the first balloon experiment in the British armed forces although the first official experimentation will not occur until 1878 30 Late March Civilian aeronaut John H Steiner takes United States Navy officers aloft in an observation balloon from the deck of a flatboat on the Mississippi River so that they can direct the fire of U S Navy mortar boats against the Confederate held Island Number Ten It will be the last aerial guidance of naval gunfire anywhere in the world until 1904 31 March May The George Washington Parke Custis transports and tows observation balloons along the York River in Virginia during the Peninsula Campaign 31 April John B Starkweather ascends several times in a balloon from the deck of the Union paddle steamer May Flower to observe Confederate positions at Port Royal South Carolina 31 June The Confederate States Navy chooses the steamer CSS Teaser to embark a balloon for use in observation of Union Army positions along the James River in Virginia 26 1 3 July The Confederate States Navy steamer Teaser operates a coal gas silk observation balloon to reconnoitre Union Army positions along the James River in Virginia the only use of a balloon by the Confederate States Navy Her capture on 4 July by the steamer USS Maratanza ends Confederate naval balloon operations 26 5 September Aeronaut Henry Tracey Coxwell and English physicist James Glaisher officially reach a height of 29 527 ft 9 000 m in a coal gas balloon according to their balloon s barometer 32 although later estimates place the maximum altitude they attained at between 35 000 and 37 000 feet 10 668 and 11 278 meters The two men nearly die of hypoxia during the flight Glaisher falling unconscious and Coxwell losing all feeling in his hands 14 1863 The Union Army Balloon Corps is disbanded early in the year 31 Dirigible airship flown by Solomon Andrews over Perth Amboy New Jersey John H Steiner takes Ferdinand von Zeppelin an officer from the Army of Wurttemberg assigned to the Union Army as an observer aloft in a balloon Zeppelin later will credit this ascent as his inspiration to create the rigid airship which he first flies in 1900 31 1864 Outbreak of the Paraguayan War between the Alliance of Argentina Brazil and Uruguay against Paraguay The Alliance forces made much use of balloon reconnaissance over the next six years English philosopher scientist Matthew Piers Watt Boulton of the UK writes his short paper On Aerial Locomotion detailing several inventions including that of the aileron almost as an afterthought he later patents them in 1868 Boulton s inspiration has been attributed to French Count Ferdinand Charles Honore Phillipe d Esterno whose detailed analysis of flapping and soaring bird flight Du Vol des Oiseaux On the flight of birds was published as a pamphlet in 1864 33 1865 Solomon Andrews flies a dirigible twice over New York City German experimenter Paul Haenlein takes out a patent for the Earliest Known Airship With a Semi rigid Frame envisioned to have a coal gas burning engine which draws its fuel from the craft s envelope which is filled with coal gas He later will construct the craft in Germany 34 Jules Verne describes in his novel The Journey to the Moon the launch of a rocket from Florida from which many years later American space flights actually will start The Frenchman Le Comte Ferdinand Charles Honore Phillipe d Esterno writes in his book About the Flight of Birds Gliding seems to be characteristic for heavy birds there are no odds which are stacked against that humans can not do the same at fair wind He had earlier published the 1864 pamphlet Du Vol des Oiseaux On the flight of birds 33 French artist and farmer Louis Pierre Mouillard makes a tentative gliding flight After years of studies of bird flight he publishes his book L Empire de l Air in 1881 He thinks that imitation of gliding and soaring flight of birds is possible but not the imitation of the flapping of wings 20 September Jacob Brodbeck in his coil spring driven airship flies 100 feet before crashing in a field near Luckenbach Texas 35 1866 First South American military balloon reconnaissance ascent On 6 July Lieutenant Colonel Roberto A Chodasiewicz an Argentine Army military engineer makes the first South American military observation ascent manning a Brazilian Army s captive ballon over Paraguayan troops during the Paraguayan War Foundation 12 January in London of the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain later to become the Royal Aeronautical Society the world s oldest society devoted to all aspects of aeronautics and astronautics 36 Francis Herbert Wenham British presents his paper on Aerial Locomotion to the RAeS Patented superposed wing design biplane multiplane Jan Wnek claims gliding flights 1866 1869 from the Odporyszow church tower 37 Krakow Museum of Ethnography the source of claims of documentary evidence refuse to allow independent researchers access to these First exhibition of aviation in London s Crystal Palace 1868 British inventor Matthew Piers Watt Boulton patents the aileron in its modern form 1869 4 July Frederick Marriott makes the first successful flight of an unmanned powered airship in the United States at San Francisco a small scale dirigible called the Avitor Hermes Jr 38 1870 1889 edit1870 Balloons are used by the French to transport letters and passengers out of besieged Paris during the Franco Prussian War Between September 1870 and January 1871 66 flights of which 58 land safely carry 110 passengers and up to three million letters out of Paris as well as 500 carrier pigeons to deliver messages back to Paris 39 One balloon accidentally sets a world distance record by ending up off the coast of Norway 40 1871 The Englishmen Wenham and Browning construct the first wind tunnel and conduct airflow experiments Alphonse Penaud flies his Planophore a small rubber powered model which is designed to have automatic pitch and roll stability 41 1872 2 February French naval architect Henri Dupuy de Lome achieves 9 to 11 km h 5 6 to 6 8 mph with his airship driven by a propeller turned by eight men 42 13 December The German experimenter Paul Haenlein tests the first airship with an internal combustion engine in Brunn Austria Hungary achieving 19 km h 12 mph the engine burns coal gas drawn from its balloon The tests are stopped because of a shortage of money 1873 The New York Daily Graphic sponsors the first attempt in history to fly across the Atlantic Ocean using a 400 000 cubic foot 11 000 m3 balloon carrying a lifeboat The attempt is abandoned when the balloon rips and collapses during inflation 25 1874 20 September Felix and Louis du Temple de la Croix build a piloted steam powered monoplane which achieves a short hop after gaining speed by rolling down a ramp 43 1875 Englishman Thomas Moy tests a tethered aeroplane with a wing span of 4 metres 13 feet powered by a steam engine 44 German experimenter Paul Haenlein improves his airship by providing it with a car suspended below its framework to accommodate the crew and engine This will become a standard practice in the design of later dirigibles 45 15 April In the balloon Zenith fr the French Navy officer Theodore Sivel fr the French journalist Joseph Croce Spinelli fr and the French scientist and editor Gaston Tissandier ascend to a record altitude of 8 600 metres 28 200 feet Hypoxia kills Sivel and Croce Spinelli during the flight and leaves Tissandier deaf 14 1876 Alphonse Penaud and Paul Gauchot apply for a patent for a power driven aeroplane with a retractable undercarriage wings with dihedral and joystick control 46 nbsp Experimental helicopter by Enrico Forlanini 1877 Museo nazionale della scienza e della tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci Milan 1877 First flight of a steam driven model helicopter built by Enrico Forlanini Imperial Japanese Army flying experience begins with the use of balloons 47 1878 Charles F Ritchel publicly demonstrates of his hand powered one man rigid airship and eventually sells five of them At the Balloon Equipment Store at the Royal Arsenal Woolwich British Army Captain James Templer conducts the British Army s first official experiments with an observation balloon It is considered the birth of British military aviation 30 1879 The British Army gains its first balloon the Pioneer Frenchman Victor Tatin builds a power driven model aeroplane with airscrews and a compressed air motor successfully flying it off the ground American scientist Edmund Clarence Stedman proposes a rigid airship inspired by the anatomy of a fish with a framework of steel brass or copper tubing and a tractor propeller mounted on the front of the envelope later changed to an engine with two propellers suspended beneath the framework The airship never is built but Stedman s design foreshadows that of the Zeppelins of World War I 48 Biot makes short hops in the Biot Massia glider 1880 The Russian naval officer Alexander Fjodorowitsch Mozhaiski patents a steam powered aircraft 49 Friedrich Wolfert and Ernst Baumgarten attempt to fly a powered dirigible in free flight but crash Balloons are used in British military manoeuvres for the first time at Aldershot 1882 4 July The first balloon flight in New Mexico is made by Park Van Tassel 50 1883 M A Goupil proposes a steam powered monoplane with tractor propeller His full size test rig lifts itself and two men in a light breeze but the design is never built The first electric powered flight is made by Gaston Tissandier who fits a Siemens AG electric motor to a dirigible Airships with electric engines Tissandier brothers Renard and Krebs Wolfert unsuccessfully tests a balloon powered by a hand cranked propeller The Berlin based German Society for Promoting Aviation publishes a magazine the Zeitschrift fur Luftschiffahrt Magazine of Aviation nbsp The 1884 Krebs amp Renard first fully controllable free flights with the LA FRANCE electric dirigible near Paris Krebs arch nbsp The astronomer Jules Janssen took this photo of La France dirigible of the French officers Charles Renard and Arthur Krebs from his Meudon astrophysic observatory in 1885 1884 9 August The first fully controllable free flight is made in the French Army dirigible La France by Charles Renard and Arthur Krebs The flight covers 8 km 5 0 mi in 23 minutes It was the first flight to return to the starting point 51 Mozhaiski finishes his monoplane span 14 m or 46 ft It makes a short flight taking off after running down a launching ramp 52 John J Montgomery makes first controlled heavier than air unpowered flight in America 53 54 The British Army deploys observation balloons in combat for the first time when it takes balloons subordinated to the Royal Engineers along on the Bechuanaland Expedition in South Africa The Imperial Russian Army adopts the balloon for military service 55 Englishman Horatio Phillipps has a patent issued for curved aerofoil sections 56 Goupil publishes his book on La Locomotion Aerienne 1885 The Prussian Airship Arm Preussische Luftschiffer Abteilung becomes a permanent unit of the army The British Army deploys observation balloons in Sudan to take part in the expedition to Suakin during the Mahdist War 30 Frenchmen Herve and Alluard achieve a hot air balloon flight of over 24 hours John J Montgomery experiments with a second glider in California 53 54 57 1886 John J Montgomery conducts studies on the flow of water and air over angles surfaces and experiments with a third glider in California 58 59 1887 30 January Thomas Scott Baldwin makes the first parachute jump in the western United States at San Francisco from a tethered balloon owned by Park Van Tassel and using a parachute co invented with Park Van Tassel 60 1888 Wolfert flies a petrol powered dirigible at Seelburg the first use of a petrol fuelled engine for aviation purposes The engine was built by Gottlieb Daimler 61 4 July Clara Van Tassel makes the first parachute jump by a woman in the western United States at Los Angeles from a balloon operated by her husband Park Van Tassel 62 1889 Percival G Spencer makes a successful parachute jump from a balloon at Drumcondra Ireland Otto Lilienthal publishes in his book Der Vogelflug als Grundlage der Fliegekunst Bird Flight as the Basis for the Art of Aviation measurements on wings so called polar diagrams which are the concept of description of artificial wings even today The book gives a reference for the advantages of the arched wing Pichancourt develops a mechanical bird which aimed to imitate the motion of a bird s wings in flight Lawrence Hargrave a British immigrant to Australia constructs a rotary engine driven by compressed air A British Army observation balloon section takes part in the Army Manoeuvres at Aldershot 30 1890 1900 edit nbsp Patent drawing of Ader s Eole nbsp Otto Lilienthal in flight ca 1895 1890 The British Army establishes a Balloon Section of the Royal Engineers commanded by Lieutenant H B Jones A balloon factory and a ballooning school support the new section 30 9 October The first brief flight of Clement Ader s steam powered fixed wing aircraft Eole takes place in Satory France It flies uncontrolled approximately 50 metres 160 feet at a height of 20 cm 7 9 in before crashing but it is the first take off of a powered airplane solely under its own power 63 64 65 66 1891 Otto Lilienthal flies about 25 m 82 ft in his Derwitzer Glider Clement Ader makes a second flight in Eole an uncontrolled 100 meter 330 foot hop that ends in a crash Ader later will experiment with an even less successful twin engined steam powered aircraft before giving up his aircraft experiments 66 29 April Chuhachi Ninomiya flies the first model airplane in Japan a rubber band powered monoplane with a four bladed pusher propeller and three wheeled landing gear It makes flights of 3 and 10 meters 9 8 and 32 8 ft The next day it flies 36 metres 118 feet 67 1892 February The first contract is awarded for the construction of a military airplane Clement Ader is contracted by the French War Ministry to build a two seater aircraft to be used as a bomber capable of lifting a 75 kilogram 165 pound bombload 68 August Clement Ader later claims to have made an uncontrolled flight of 200 metres 660 feet in the Avion II also referred to as the Zephyr or Eole II at a field in Satory in this month Otto Lilienthal flies over 82 metres 90 yards in his Sudende Glider Austria Hungary s army gains a permanent air corps the Kaiserlich und Konigliche Militaraeronautische Anstalt Imperial and Royal Military Aeronautical Group 1893 Otto Lilienthal flies about 250 m 820 ft in his Maihohe Rhinow Glider Lawrence Hargrave demonstrates a human carrying glider in Australia at an aeronautical congress in Sydney It is based on the box kite an invention of Hargrave s It becomes an example for several scientific kites and aeroplane constructions British Army Captain Baden Baden Powell begins experiments with man lifting kites 69 Horatio Phillips builds a steam powered test rig at Harrow A venetian blind style multiplane with a stack of wings each with a span of 5 8 metres 19 ft and a chord of only 4 cm 1 5 in Tethered to the centre of a circular track its rear wheels rose 60 90 cm 2 0 3 0 ft while front wheels remained on ground 70 1894 Czeslaw Tanski successfully flies powered models in Poland and begins work on full size gliders Railway engineer Octave Chanute publishes Progress in Flying Machines describing the research completed so far into flight Chanute s book a summary of many articles published in the American Engineer and Railroad Journal is a comprehensive account on the stage of development worldwide on the way to the aeroplane Otto Lilienthal s Normal soaring apparatus is the first serial production of a glider Using different aircraft constructions he covers distances of up to 250 metres 820 ft The British Army forms a kiting section for the operation of man lifting kites within the Royal Engineers 69 31 July Hiram Maxim launches an enormous biplane test rig with a wingspan of 32 m 105 ft propelled by two steam engines It lifts off and engages the restraining rails which prevent it from leaving the track 65 November Lawrence Hargrave demonstrates stable flight with a tethered box kite 4 December German meteorologist and Aerologist Arthur Berson ascends to 9 155 metres 30 036 feet in a balloon setting a new world altitude record for human flight 1895 Percy Pilcher makes his first successful flight in a glider named the Bat 71 Pablo Suarez flies his Suarez Glider in Argentina following correspondence with Lilienthal By the mid 1890s the Imperial Russian Navy has established aerostatic parks on the coasts of the Baltic Sea and Black Sea 72 1896 6 May Samuel Pierpont Langley flies the unmanned Aerodrome No 5 from a houseboat on the Potomac River a distance of 3 300 ft 1 000 m the first truly successful flight of one of his powered models 73 June Octave Chanute organises a flyer camp at Lake Michigan during which both a copy of one of Lilienthal s designs and a biplane built by Chanute are tested 74 9 August Otto Lilienthal crashes after a stall caused by a gust breaking his back He dies the following day 75 October Ground testing of an all aluminium airship designed by the Austro Hungarian engineer David Schwarz and built by Carl Berg begins in Berlin Schwarz will die of a heart attack before seeing it fly 76 November Samuel Pierpont Langley flies the unmanned Aerodrome No 6 a distance of 4 200 ft 1 300 m Germans August von Parseval and Hans Bartsch von Sigsfeld invent the kite balloon for observations in strong winds William Paul Butusov a Russian immigrant to U S with the Chanute group construct the Albatross Soaring Machine which achieves an unmanned unpowered uncontrolled hop from a ramp William Frost Welsh flies the Frost Airship Glider 500 meters possibly with balloon assist 1897 11 June Salomon Andree Nils Strindberg and Knut Fraenkel attempt an expedition to the North Pole by free balloon from Spitsbergen They crash within three days but manage to survive for several months in the pack ice Their remains are discovered in 1930 on White Island It was possible to develop the preserved film material 77 12 June Friedrich Hermann Wolfert and his mechanic are killed when their petrol powered airship catches fire during a demonstration at the Tempelhof field 78 14 October Clement Ader later asserts that on this date he made a 300 m 980 ft flight in his steam powered uncontrolled Avion III also referred to as Aquilon or the Eole III His claim is disputed The French Army is not impressed and withdraws funding 3 November The first flight in a rigid airship is made by Ernst Jagels flying the all aluminium craft designed by David Schwarz and built by Carl Berg It reaches an altitude of 24 m 79 ft proving metal framed airships can become airborne but after an engine failure is damaged beyond repair in an emergency landing 79 Carl Rickard Nyberg starts working on his Flugan 1898 March Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt calls for the creation of a four officer board to study the utility of Samuel P Langley s flying machine the Langley Aerodrome Roosevelt asserts that the machine has worked It is the first documented United States Navy expression of interest in aviation 80 The machine is commissioned by the United States Army Signal Corps 2 September Alberto Santos Dumont flies his first airship design 81 22 October Augustus Moore Herring claims a heavier than air flight along the beach at St Joseph Michigan of 70 feet 21 m by attaching a compressed air motor to a biplane hang glider However there are no witnesses The Aero Club de France is founded 82 The French Navy torpedo boat tender Foudre operates a spherical balloon experimentally during naval maneuvers in the Mediterranean Sea 83 Lyman Wiswell Gilmore Jr American builds a steam driven monoplane Edson Fessenden Gallaudet American builds a hydroplane 1899 The Hague Convention of 1899 prohibits military aircraft from discharging projectiles and explosives but permits the wartime use of aircraft for reconnaissance and other purposes 84 The Wright brothers begin experimenting with wing warping as a means of controlling an aircraft Samuel Cody begins experiments with kites big enough to lift a person Percy Pilcher flies various gliders and is close to completing a powered machine but is killed when his glider crashes at Stanford Hall England after a tail strut fails Pilcher used a team of horses to pull the glider into the air 85 22 November The first of three British Army observation balloon sections arrives in South Africa to take part in the Second Boer War The war will see the first large scale use of observation balloons by the British armed forces 86 11 December A British Army observation balloon section takes part in the Battle of Magersfontein during the Second Boer War 86 1900 February In the Second Boer War a British Army observation balloon section takes part in the relief of Ladysmith 86 2 July Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin pilots his experimental first Zeppelin LZ 1 over Lake Constance reaching an altitude of 400 metres 1 300 feet with five men on board Although the flight lasts only 18 minutes covers only 5 6 kilometers 3 5 mi and ends in an emergency landing on the lake it is the first flight of a truly successful rigid airship 87 12 September The Wright brothers arrive at Kitty Hawk North Carolina to begin their first season of glider experiments there 88 3 October Probably on this date Wilbur Wright makes the Wright brothers first glider flight at Kitty Hawk During their tests they will fly the 1900 glider both as a glider and as a kite under various wind conditions 89 17 October On her second flight the Zeppelin LZ 1 remains aloft for 80 minutes 90 23 October The Wright brothers abandon their 1900 glider in a sand hollow and break camp at Kitty Hawk to return home to Dayton Ohio 91 November The British Army s observation balloon section s duty in the Second Boer War comes to an end It is ordered home from South Africa because the Boers have switched to guerrilla tactics making the balloons unsuitable for supporting British operations 86 Births edit1825 8 February Henri Giffard French inventor dirigible designer suicide 1882 1838 8 July Ferdinand von Zeppelin German airship manufacturer died 1917 1848 23 May Otto Lilienthal German glider pilot died 1896 in aviation accident 1853 25 July Park Van Tassel American balloonist and parachute designer died 1930 1854 28 March Sir George White 1st Baronet English aircraft manufacturer died 1916 1858 15 February John Joseph Montgomery American aviator died 1911 1859 3 February Hugo Junkers German aircraft manufacturer died 1935 1863 13 December Mason Patrick Chief of United States Army Air Service died 1942 1865 10 June E Lilian Todd American aircraft designer died 1937 1866 16 January Percy Pilcher English glider pilot died 1899 in aviation accident 1867 6 March Samuel Franklin Cody American born showman and aviator died 1913 accident 16 April Wilbur Wright American aviator died 1912 of typhoid fever 1871 19 August Orville Wright American aviator died 1948 1872 13 March Leon Delagrange French aviator and sculptor died 1910 in aviation accident 1 July Louis Bleriot French aviator died 1936 1873 3 February Karl Jatho German aviation pioneer died 1933 Hugh Trenchard 1st Viscount Trenchard English military aviator died 1956 20 July Alberto Santos Dumont Brazilian aeronautical engineer suicide 1932 26 September Therese Peltier French sculptor and pioneer aviator died 1926 1874 26 May Henri Farman Anglo French aviator died 1958 1875 11 May Harriet Quimby American aviator journalist and screenwriter died 1912 in aviation accident 11 September Horatio Barber English aviation pioneer died 1964 1876 14 October Charles de Tricornot de Rose French military aviator died 1916 in aviation accident 1877 22 March Sefton Brancker English air vice marshal died 1930 in aviation accident 27 August Charles Rolls English aviator and automobile pioneer died 1910 in aviation accident 1878 8 January Millicent Bryant Australian pilot drowned 1927 21 May Glenn Curtiss American aircraft manufacturer died 1930 28 September Lilian Bland Anglo Irish journalist and pioneer aviator died 1971 29 December Marthe Niel French pilot died 1928 1879 21 August Claude Grahame White English aviator died 1959 1880 5 February Gabriel Voisin French aircraft manufacturer died 1973 1881 27 September Raymond Saulnier French aircraft manufacturer died 1964 1 October William Boeing American aircraft manufacturer died 1956 1882 27 July Geoffrey de Havilland English aircraft manufacturer and sportsman died 1965 19 November Aurel Vlaicu Romanian aeronautical engineer and pilot died 1913 in aviation accident 1883 10 January Hubert Latham French aviator died 1912 16 January Oswald Short English aeronautical engineer died 1969 19 July Louis Paulhan French aviator died 1963 1884 8 February John Moore Brabazon 1st Baron Brabazon of Tara English aviator and politician died 1964 14 May Claude Dornier German aircraft designer died 1969 12 June Henry Petre English solicitor and pioneer Australian military aviator died 1962 25 October B C Hucks English aviation pioneer died 1918 1885 5 March Graham Gilmour English aviator died 1912 in aviation accident 14 March Raoul Lufbery French American fighter ace died 1918 in action 6 June Roy Fedden English aircraft engine designer died 1973 15 November Frederick Handley Page English aircraft manufacturer died 1962 30 November Albert Kesselring German military aviator died 1960 1886 8 February Gunther Pluschow German aviator died 1931 in aviation accident 23 February Didier Masson French aviator died 1950 25 June Henry H Arnold American military aviator General of the Air Force died 1950 23 July Arthur Whitten Brown English aviator died 1948 1887 24 May Mick Mannock British fighter ace died 1918 in action 22 September Maurice Prevost French aviator died 1952 26 September William Barnard Rhodes Moorhouse English military aviator died 1915 of wounds 11 November Walther Wever German military aviator died 1936 in aviation accident 1888 18 January Thomas Sopwith English aircraft manufacturer died 1989 24 January Ernst Heinkel German aircraft manufacturer died 1958 25 May George Herbert Scott English aviator died 1930 in aviation accident 6 October Roland Garros French aviator died 1918 in action 29 October 10 November OS Andrei Tupolev Russian aircraft designer died 1972 1889 22 January Harry Hawker Australian born aviator died 1921 in aviation accident 1 May Herbert Smith English aeronautical engineer died 1977 25 May Igor Sikorsky Russian born aircraft manufacturer died 1972 13 June Adolphe Pegoud French acrobatic pilot and first fighter ace died 1915 in action 25 June Gustav Hamel German born British aviator lost on flight 1914 1890 6 April Anthony Fokker Dutch aircraft manufacturer died 1939 13 August Lydia Zvereva Russian aviation pioneer died 1916 22 August Hans Joachim Buddecke German fighter ace died 1918 in action 21 September Max Immelmann German fighter ace died 1916 in action 8 October Eddie Rickenbacker American fighter ace died 1973 25 October Floyd Bennett American naval aviator died 1928 30 December Lanoe Hawker English fighter ace died 1916 in action 1891 22 January Bruno Loerzer German military aviator died 1960 30 January Walter Beech American aircraft manufacturer died 1950 18 February Julius Busa German fighter ace died 1917 in action 3 March Fritz Rumey German fighter ace died 1918 in action 24 March Rudolf Berthold German fighter ace died 1920 in Kapp Putsch 5 April Eric Gordon England Argentine born English aviator pioneer glider pilot and racing driver died 1970 16 May Adolf Ritter von Tutschek German fighter ace died 1918 in action 19 May Oswald Boelcke German fighter ace died 1916 in action 11 July Joseph Sadi Lecointe French aviator died 1944 July 30 Roderic Dallas Australian World War I fighter ace died 1918 in action December 6 Gotthard Sachsenberg German naval aviator fighter ace died 1961 December 17 Karl Emil Schafer German fighter ace died 1917 in action Zee Yee Lee Chinese aviation pioneer died 1944 1892 January 26 Bessie Coleman American pilot died 1926 92 15 March Charles Nungesser French fighter ace died 1927 accident 30 March Erhard Milch German military aviator died 1972 6 April Donald Wills Douglas Sr American aircraft manufacturer died 1981 13 April Arthur Bomber Harris English military aviator died 1984 Robert Watson Watt Scottish pioneer of radar died 1973 2 May Manfred von Richthofen German fighter ace died 1918 in combat 6 July Willy Coppens Belgian fighter ace died 1986 11 July Trafford Leigh Mallory English military aviator died 1944 in aviation accident 17 July Edwin Harris Dunning English naval aviator died 1917 in aviation accident 5 November John Alcock English aviator died 1919 in aviation accident 14 November Dieudonne Costes French aviator died 1973 8 December Bert Hinkler Australian pioneer aviator died 1933 in aviation accident 24 December Ruth Chatterton American actress novelist and aviator died 1961 27 December Alfred Edwin McKay Canadian fighter ace died 1917 in combat 1893 12 January Hermann Goring German military aviator suicide 1946 5 August Sydney Camm English aircraft designer died 1966 17 December Charles C Banks English fighter ace died 1971 1894 7 March Frank Halford English aircraft engine designer died 1955 27 March Rene Fonck French fighter ace died 1953 5 April Larry Bell American aircraft manufacturer died 1956 6 May Alan Cobham English aviator died 1973 13 December Friedrich Hefty Austro Hungarian fighter ace died 1965 24 December Georges Guynemer French fighter ace died 1917 in action 1895 28 March James McCudden English fighter ace died 1918 in aviation accident 20 May R J Mitchell English aircraft designer died 1937 14 July Leefe Robinson English military aviator died 1918 21 September Juan de la Cierva 1st Count of la Cierva Spanish aeronautical engineer died 1936 in aviation accident 28 October probable Clyde Pangborn American aviator died 1958 1 November Arthur Raymond Brooks American fighter ace and aviator died 1991 1896 12 April Edwin Eugene Aldrin Sr American aviator died 1974 26 April Ernst Udet German military aviator suicide 1941 14 August Albert Ball English fighter ace died 1917 in combat 1897 9 February Charles Kingsford Smith Australian aviator died 1935 in aviation accident 23 February Edgar Percival Australian aircraft designer died 1984 24 July Amelia Earhart American aviator lost 1937 on flight 15 August Ludovic Arrachart French aviator died 1933 in aviation accident 1898 18 January George McCubbin South African fighter pilot and cricketer died 1944 22 November Wiley Post American aviator died 1935 in aviation accident 1899 17 January Nevil Shute Norway English born novelist and aeronautical engineer died 1960 24 January Hoyt Vandenberg American military aviator died 1954 9 April James Smith McDonnell American aircraft manufacturer died 1980 1 August Jimmie Angel American aviator died 1956 24 August Max Nather German fighter ace died 1919 in combat Notes edit Garnerin s Balloon The Times No 5455 London 6 July 1802 col B p 2 Napoleon s Coronation as Emperor of the French Georgian Index Retrieved 2015 12 07 a b Layman 1989 p 31 Hallion 2003 p 74 a b Gibbs Smith 2003 p 35 Hallion 2003 p 75 a b Gibbs Smith 2003 p 39 Probst Ernst August 2010 Koniginnen der Lufte in Europa GRIN Verlag pp 197 210 ISBN 978 3 640 68876 0 a b Shtashower Daniel Book review Falling Upwards How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes washingtonpost com December 13 2013 1824 Death Of Lieut Thomas Harris At Beddington Park Croydon The Aeronautical Journal 33 Royal Aeronautical Society 1929 Aeronautics Heavenly Matches Time 21 August 1933 Archived from the original on November 24 2009 The Times 16261 London 5 15 November 1896 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Shtashower Daniel The First to Float Above the World The Washington Post December 15 2013 p B3 illustration caption a b c century of flight net Balloons to the Stratosphere Holmes 2014 p 75 Holmes 2014 p 102 Milberry Larry 1979 The Early Days 1840 1914 Aviation in Canada McGraw Hill Ryerson p 11 ISBN 978 0 07 082778 3 Henson and Stringfellow Flight 24 February 1956 via Flight Global Layman 1989 p 13 Lewis 1962 p 178 Whitehouse Arch The Zeppelin Fighters New York Ace Books 1966 p 14 Lewis 1962 p 178 Kundu Ajoy Kumar 2010 Aircraft Design Cambridge University Press p 3 ISBN 978 1 139 48745 0 Holmes 2014 p 156 a b Infoplease Famous Firsts in Aviation a b c Layman 1989 p 14 Layman R D 1989 pp 115 116 The Magnetic Telegraph Company Telegram from Balloon Enterprise to the President of the United States 16 June 1861 Layman 1989 p 115 a b c d e rafmuseum org uk Early Military Ballooning a b c d e Layman 1989 p 116 Holmes 2014 pp 213 5 a b Harrison James P Mastering the Sky A History of Aviation from Ancient Times to the Present Da Capo Press 2000 p 48 ISBN 978 1885119681 Whitehouse 1966 p 14 Texas Less Travelled The Brodbeck Airship History of the Society Royal Aeronautical Society Kulawik Piotr Jan Wnek l heros de sous la voute de ciel Jan Wnek the hero in the vault of heaven in French Archived from the original on 2013 06 02 Retrieved 2010 09 13 Harwood Craig S and Fogel Gary B Quest for Flight John J Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West Norman Okla University of Oklahoma Press 2012 p 14 Loving Matthew Bullets and Balloons MHQ The Quarterly Journal of Military History Autumn 2011 p 17 Lienhard John H 1988 1997 The Siege of Paris Engines of Our Ingenuity Retrieved 2014 05 15 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 56 Henri Dupuy de Lome The Lighter Than Air Society Retrieved 15 December 2012 Gibbs Smith 2002 p 59 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 61 Whitehouse 1966 p 14 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 57 Francillon Rene J Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1979 ISBN 0 87021 313 X p 29 Whitehouse Arch The Zeppelin Fighters New York Ace Books 1966 p 15 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 66 Fogel Gary B Sky Rider Park Van Tassel and the Rise of Ballooning in the West New Mexico University of New Mexico Press 2021 p 5 Hallion 2003 p 87 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 67 a b Richard J Montgomery response to Questions 22 and 24 January 14 1919 in Equity No 33852 John J Montgomery Collection Santa Clara University Archives and Special Collections a b Affidavit of Charles Burroughs dated February 26 1920 Layman 1989 p 91 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 68 Zachariah Montgomery to Richard Montgomery August 6 1885 John J Montgomery Collection Santa Clara University Archives and Special Collections John J Montgomery to Margaret H Montgomery December 23 1885 Montgomery John J 1910 The Origin of Warping Professor Montgomery s Experiments Aeronautics London Vol 3 No 5 pp 63 64 Fogel Gary B Sky Rider Park Van Tassel and the Rise of Ballooning in the West New Mexico University of New Mexico Press 2021 p 40 Hallion 2003 p 89 Fogel Gary B Sky Rider Park Van Tassel and the Rise of Ballooning in the West New Mexico University of New Mexico Press 2021 p 53 Crouch Tom D Clement Ader Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2011 03 03 Gray Carroll 1998 2003 Clement Ader 1841 1925 Flying Machines Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Gibbs Smith Charles H 1959 Hops and Flights A Roll Call of Early Powered Take offs Flight 75 468 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Macintyre Donald Aircraft Carrier The Majestic Weapon New York Ballantine Books Inc 1968 p 8 Francillon Rene J Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1979 ISBN 0 87021 313 X p 1 Crosby Francis The Complete Guide to Fighters amp Bombers of the World An Illustrated History of the World s Greatest Military Aircraft From the Pioneering Days of Air Fighting in World War I Through the Jet Fighters and Stealth Bombers of the Present Day London Anness Publishing Ltd 2006 ISBN 978 1 84476 917 9 p 16 a b rafmuseum org uk Kiting Gibbs Smith 2003 p 84 Lewis 1962 p 397 Layman 1989 p 85 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 80 Hallion 2003 p 175 Hallion 2003 p 161 Phythyon John R Jr Great War at Sea Zeppelins Virginia Beach Virginia Avalanche Press Inc 2007 pp 5 43 Hallion 2003 p 79 Robinson 1973 p 3 Robinson 1973 pp 5 6 Butler Glen Col USMC That Other Air Service Centennial Naval History June 2012 p 54 Robinson 1973 p 5 Gibbs Smith 2003 p 87 Layman 1989 p 17 Whitehouse 1966 p 32 Lewis 1962 p 399 a b c d rafmuseum org uk The Boer War Cross Wilbur Zeppelins of World War I New York Barnes amp Noble 1991 ISBN 1 56619 390 7 pp 1 4 Crouch 1989 p 186 Crouch 1989 p 189 Phythyon John R Jr Great War at Sea Zeppelins Virginia Beach Virginia Avalanche Press Inc 2007 p 5 Crouch 1989 p 199 Barr Linda 2004 Bessie Coleman Pioneer Pilot Columbus Ohio Zaner Bloser p 6 ISBN 978 0 73672 039 7 References editCrouch Tom The Bishop s Boys A Life of Wilbur and Orville Wright New York W W Norton 1989 Gibbs Smith C H Aviation London NMSI 2003 ISBN 1 900747 52 9 Hallion Richard P Taking Flight New York Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 0 19 516035 5 Holmes Richard Falling Upwards London Collinis 2014 ISBN 978 0 00 738692 5 Layman R D Before the Aircraft Carrier The Development of Aviation Vessels 1849 1922 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1989 ISBN 0 87021 210 9 Lewis Peter British Aircraft 1809 1914 London Putnam 1962 Robinson Douglas H Giants in the Sky Henley on Thames Foulis 1973 ISBN 0 85429 145 8 Whitehouse Arch The Zeppelin Fighters New York Ace Books 1966 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of aviation in the 19th century amp oldid 1214671936, 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