1887-1965 |
Pittsburgh, PA EB Chirp |
courtesy of Steve Remington - CollectAir |
Personal Recollections of Waldo Waterman Aerial acrobatics (aerobatics) were all the rage then, and Lincoln Beachey was the best there ever was in fancy flying. Orville Wright had called him "The greatest aviator of all" in testimony of his superb and hard-won skill. In September 1913, Beachey had just learned that the great French pilot, Adolphe Peqoud, had supposedly been the first to loop an aeroplane. That information almost drove Beachey crazy as he muttered "Why hadn't I thought of that?" Beachey was not to be outdone. He immediately had his biplane modified and strengthened, and performed his first loop over North Island on November 18, 1913, only about a month before my arrival. From that moment on the loop was standard fare in his act and would be ballyhooed far and wide by Bill Pickens, his superagent. Naturally, every other exhibition flyer wanted to have a looping airplane, and since Beachey had done it first at North Island, Macaulay was determined to have a looper. The ill-fated Kearney had traded in his Curtiss-copy for a Curtiss hydroaeroplane, and Ted Macaulay had acquired the trade-in for his personal use. Jake lined me up working on its conversion. Already several pilots had been killed trying to duplicate Pegoud and Beachey, primarily because their planes weren't structured for looping stresses. It was a failing that Macaulay impressed upon us should never happen with his aeroplane." |
Knoxville Journal and Tribune, Knoxville, Tennessee: February 26, 1914, Transcribed by Bob Davis - 2-20-07 |
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You may want to use the "FIND" function on "Macauley" to locate the entry on the page. |
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From The Early Birds of Aviation Roster, 1996 |
Highly Recommended Further Reading:
WALDO: Pioneer Aviator A Personal History of American Aviation, 1910-1944 by Waldo Dean Waterman with Jack Carpenter Arsdalen, Bosch & Co. |
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