1883-1977 |
in EB Checkered Cap CHIRP, 1956 | Courtesy: Photograph Collection Los Angeles Public Library |
CHIRP, 1960 |
Collection of Sergio Pasquali
Courtesy of Giovanni Giorgetti, 8-19-10 |
1910 International Air Meet at Dominguez Hills Sponsored by the California State University at Dominguez Hills. For the rest of the story, click on the title. |
EB Charles F. Willard, who performed the historic first flight, observed the anniversary by flying over the fifty-five mile route he followed a half-century previously. The routine anniversary flight was in marked contrast to the initial epocal event. A Los Angeles newspaper headlined the previous: "Willard Makes Perilous Flight Over City." Great speculation preceeded the flight, newspaper files reveal. The twenty-seven-year old pilot made the historic flight in a $7,500 biplane powered by a 50 h.p. engine. EB Willard is airplane pilot No. 4 in the U.S. and holder of F. A. I. number ten. A member of the Aeronautic Society, he piloted its airplane "Golden Flyer," the first Curtiss plane, in Aug. 1909, a Mineola. |
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Photo Edwin Levick, N. Y. |
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WITH CURTISS BIPLANE Noted Aviator Carries Three Passenger Over Garden City Course. WILCOX ALSO MAKES FLIGHT Harmon Remains in the Air for Over an Hour, Makes Thirty- one Laps of the Track (Special Dispatch to The Morning Telegraph) |
GARDEN CITY, L. I., Aug. 14, 1910. Aviators who are making good are following each other fast and thick on the local grounds here. Charles Willard with a Curtiss biplane today established an American record for passenger carrying. He made a 200 yard jump from the Aeronatutic Society sheds to the grand stand, transporting three persons with him. They were Archie Albine, R. F. Patterson, Harry W. Willard. Phillip Wilcox, the Columbia student, who has just returned from Pine Camp, N. Y., made a beautiful flight here this morning. It was the second time he had ever occupied an aviator's seat, having taken the aeroplane out to run across the grass once before it met with the accident with Charley Hamilton. Today he started the machine in front of the grand stand at about 5 o'clock in the morning, lifted it to 100-foot altitude and maintaining this height steadly, made a complete circuit. He was enthusiastically applauded by the little group of aviators and mechanicians on the ground. Clifford B. Harmon, Willard, Captain Baldwin, Elmer Burlingame, Edwards and Edick and J. J. Frisbee were all included on today's programme. Harmon was in the air over an hour and made thirty-one laps of the course. He received, according to the point system of contest, 53 points in all. Captain Baldwin's record for the day was 20 points. Mr. Burlingame did some grass-cutting with The Imp, the first monoplane seen on the field here. J. J. Frisbee, the balloonist, caused a near-sensation here today when he took out his new machine and after running along the ground a short distance, lifted the Rochester, as he has named the plane, into the air. But there was trouble with the control and the Rochester plunged and pitched. Just as it appeared ............... |
Airport Celebrate it's 50th Anniversary This Year Decatur Wrote It's Own Chapter in Aviation History This article appeared in the May 22, 1996 issue of the Decatur Tribune and is used with permission. Photo courtesy of Herald & Review. Compiled by Paul Osborne. Charles F. Willard took off in a Curtiss Model D-4 flew six miles, reaching a height of 600 feet, and, although Glenn Curtiss had made the first airplane flight in Illinois, in Chicago, the previous year, Williard's flight was recorded as the best in the state up to that time. Mechanic for the flight was Loren Hodge of Decatur. click on the title. |
The commemoration ceremony was held on May 21st under auspices of the Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce. Dr. K. E. Smith, president of the Chamber, presided, and Mr. Willard was on hand as the guest of honor. Other Early Birds present and taking part were Burrell Tibbs and Horace Keane. Oklahoma citizens who witnessed that first flight were also on hand and were introduced. Presentation of the plaque and the response by Mr. Willard were televised. Both EB Tibbs and EB Keane also spoke briefly. |
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EB MEETINGS ACROSS THE NATION Plaque Commemorates Willard's Decatur Flight You can read the rest of the story by clicking on the title above. |
Daily Journal and Tribune, Knoxville, Tennessee: August 19, 1910, Via email from Bob Davis - 9-2-03 |
Walter Brookins Arthur Johnson Glenn H. Curtiss Charles F. Willard M. Didier Masson A.V. Roe, J. Graham White William M. Hilliard J. M. All_as Ernest P. Lincoln, Clifford D. Harmon Captain Thomas Baldwin Jacques Delesseps Dr. W. P. Christmas, John G. Stratton Horace F. Kearner Greely S. Curtis |
Wright biplanes Wright biplanes Curtiss biplanes Curtiss biplanes Vendome aeroplane Roe Triplane Farman biplane & Bleriot monoplane; Herring-Burgess biplane Harvard biplane; Christmas biplane Burgess-Curtiss aeroplane Pfitzer monoplane Bleriot monoplane |
CHARLES WILLARD LANDED HERE, MARCH 31, 1911 Memorial Plaque in Tournament Park Pasadena, CA Photo by Ralph Cooper - 2001 |
From The Early Birds of Aviation Roster, 1996 |
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