1872-1952 |
Photo Edwin Levick, N. Y. |
The Third Member's Machine to Fly The flight of this machine was the more noteworthy because it was the first time that any inventor had been able to construct an apparatus that would successfully use an ordinary stock automobile motor. Dr. Greene used a British-American 26 h. p. engine weighing 320 lbs. Subsequently he installed the Kimball motor, which was half the weight. The machine flew much better then, because it did not need 60 or 70 lbs. of ballast hung on the front control to balance it; and, on the doctor's leaving for Middletown, O., to take up the manufacture of aeroplanes, the apparatus was bought by Mr. Kimball, and taken to Rahway, N. J., where experiments were continued with it in conjunction with F. E. Boland. This chanced to involve Mr. Kimball in at any rate one piece of good luck, for it so happened that it caused him to move his valuable motor away from his laboratory a few days before the fire. |
For the last 40 years of his life, he didn't even admit he knew how to fly. He quietly practiced dentistry in the Peace River country of Canada, only occasionally dropping into his other world to visit his family in the United States or attend meetings of the Early Birds of Aviation, a club with a membership of people who had flown before 1916. He never piloted a plane or talked about his accomplishments up in the north. Neighbors and friends didn't even realize that Doc Greene had been one of the first, and one of the best. Editors' Note: 9-7-03 - These introductory paragraphs on Dr. Greene's fascinating career were provided through the courtesy of the Albert Dental Association. Sorry to say, the link has become obsolete and I can't find the rest of the article online. |
Sunday, Oct. 4, 1981/UPSTATE/ BY EDWIN SAYERS On June 29, 19-09, Greene climbed aboard his machine, took off from a field on the outskirts of town, rose to about 100 feet, and then was caught by a gust of wind which sent his plane into the branches of a tall, stately elm. Greene unsnarled himself from the wreckage and climbed down from the tree, disappointed but unscratched. |
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Mason - Dentist - Aviator by RW. Bro. Richard Ashby |
From The Early Birds of Aviation ROSTER, 1966 |
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