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  Wikipedia: Timeline of aviation history

Wikipedia: Timeline of aviation history
Timeline of aviation history
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Around 1490 1809
  • September: Sir George Cayley published his seminal paper On Aerial Navigation, setting out for the first time the scientific principles of heavier-than-air flight.

1853 1890
  • Clement Ader: first powered heavier-than-air flight (but uncontrolled).

1890s
  • Otto Lilienthal: first controlled glider flights, in excess of 300m. Numerous repetitions. Lilienthal, often called the first pilot, also performs the first well-documented and photographed flights. Breaks his spine on the 2500th flight. Leaves highly influential notebooks.
  • Samuel Pierpont Langley said by some to have flown the heavier-than-air powered unmanned aircraft Aerodrome.

1894
  • November: Lawrence Hargrave demonstrates stable flight with a tethered box kite.
  • Octave Chanute publishes his book Progress in Flying Machines, the first history of aviation and highly influential on many early pioneers, including the Wright Brothers.

1899
  • Percy Pilcher flies various gliders and is close to completing a powered machine when he is tragically killed.

1903
  • March 31 : Richard Pearse reputed to have made an uncontrolled powered flight in a heavier-than-air craft, a monoplane of his own construction, that crash lands on a hedge. (This date is computed from circumstantial evidence of eyewitnesses as the flight was not well-documented at the time.)
  • August: Karl Jatho flies up to 200 feet in a powered heavier-than-air craft
  • December: After years of dedicated research and development, the brothers Orville and Wilbur Wright fly 300 yards in a more practical aeroplane. This is the first controlled powered heavier-than-air flight and the first photographed heavier-than-air flight.

1906 1907
  • Paul Cornu: first helicopter flight (just a hop though)

1908
  • May: First heavy-than-air passenger carrying flight - Wilbur Wright flew Charles W. Furnas for a distance of 2.5 miles in a Wright Model B.
  • September: Lieutenant Thomas Selfridge became the first person killed in a powered airplane and the first military aviation casualty when Wilbur crashed his two-passenger plane during military tests at Fort Myer in Virginia.

1909 1910
  • October: Romanian inventor Henri Coanda (1886-1972), constructed the first prototypical jet engine in the world, named the Coanda-1910, exhibited at the International Aeronautical Show in Paris and tested near Paris.

1911
  • First coast-to-coast airplane flight across the USA by the Vin Fiz Flyer - taking 49 days, with several crashes en-route.
  • July: First ever commercial cargo to be carried by an aircraft, a case of electric lamps, from Shoreham to Hove in England.
  • October: First aircraft to be used in war was a Bleriot monoplane flown from Tripoli to Azizia to spy on Turkish positions.

1912
  • First all-metal aircraft flies, the Tubavion monoplane built by Ponche and Primard in France.

1914
  • Planes at war. Germany builds largest airplane fleet, consisting of 1200 planes. First aerial combats.

1918
  • Manfred von Richthofen, a living legend called the "Red Baron" and "ace of aces", claims 80th victory, and finally is shot down

1919 1923
  • May: The first non-stop USA coast-to-coast flight.

1927 1928
  • May: Charles Kingsford-Smith, Ulm, Lyon and Warner flew the Southern Cross, a modified Fokker Trimotor from San Francisco to Brisbane - the first crossing of the Pacific Ocean by air.
  • June: First rocket-powered plane, the Ente.

1936 1937 1939 1942
  • Messerschmitt Me 262: first jet fighter, test-piloted by Fritz Wendel. Fastest plane of World War II. Mass production started in 1944, too late for a decisive impact.

1947 1948
  • July 14: Six de Havilland Vampire F3s of RAF No 54 Squadron, commanded by Wg Cdr D S Wilson-MacDonald, DSO, DFC, became the first jet aircraft to fly across the Atlantic Ocean. They went via Stornoway, Iceland and Labrador to Montreal on the first leg of a goodwill tour of Canada and the US where they gave several formation aerobatic displays.

1952
  • The British state airline BOAC introduced into service the first jet airliner the De Havilland Comet.
  • The first non-stop, unrefuellled flight from England to Australia was completed by an English Electric Canberra bomber in under 24 hours.

1961
  • First space flight by Yuri Gagarin, once around the planet within 108 minutes.

1967
  • Air speed record of 4,534 mph (Mach 6.1) is established by the North American X-15 research aircraft.

1969
  • Boeing 747 is unveiled. At the time the largest passenger carrying aircraft ever built and one which was to revolutionise commercial air travel.
  • July: Neil Armstrong is the first man to walk on the moon.

1974
  • September: A SR-71 Blackbird crossed the Atlantic Ocean in less than two hours.

1976
  • British Airways starts the first supersonic airliner service with the introduction of the Concorde.

1977
  • August: Gossamer Condor became the first human-powered aeroplane, flying a figure-8 course to demonstrate sustained, controlled flight.

1986
  • December: First non-stop flight around the planet without refueling.

2001
  • April: The unmanned aircraft Global Hawk flies automatically from Edwards AFB in the US to Australia non-stop and unrefuelled. This is he longest point-to-point flight ever undertaken by an unmanned aircraft, and took 23 hours and 23 minutes.

2003
  • October: First totally autonomous flight across the Atlantic by a computer-controlled model aircraft.
  • December: First "centenary" of powered flight (although first powered flight actually dates back 1.5 centuries: in 1852 Henri Giffard flew 15 miles in dirigible with on-board steam engine). Reconstruction of Wright flyer fails to lift off, presumably because the design is not really self-powered but needs a strong headwind.

See also: Aviation history

  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 
Modified by Geona