FACTOID # 170: Apparently, the Federated States of Micronesia is the place to leave - and Afghanistan is the place to go.
 
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Encyclopedia > 1909 in aviation
Years
in aviation
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1914


This is a list of aviation-related events from 1909:


Events

February

May

  • May 14 - Samuel Cody makes the first aeroplane flight in the UK longer than 1 mile (1.6 km) in the British Army Aeroplane No. 1.

July

  • The International Exhibition of Aviation opens in Frankfurt-am-Main (ILA - regularly in Berlin in our times).
  • July 25 - Louis Blériot claims a £1,000 prize from the British Daily Mail newspaper for being the first pilot to cross the English Channel. He makes the crossing in his Blériot Type XI from Les Barraques (near Calais) to Northfall Meadow (near Dover Castle) in 37 minutes. Blériot also received an additional £3,000 from the French government.

August

October

  • Die Deutsche Luftschiffahrt Aktiengessellschaft (DELAG) becomes the world's first airline, founded at Frankfurt-am-Main.
  • October 30 - John Moore-Brabazon in a Short Brothers aircraft flies the first circular mile in the UK and wins £1,000 from the Daily Mail newspaper.

November

  • November 3 - Alec Ogilvie patents the first air-speed indicator.
  • November 4 - John Moore-Brabazon makes the first live cargo flight by airplane when he puts a small pig in a waste-paper basket tied to a wing-strut of his airplane.
  • November 16, foundation of the first air transport company in the world, DELAG (German Aviation Company).

First flights

Entered service

March

August


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Aviation's Belle Epoque (3319 words)
Robert Esnault-Pelterie, the organizer of the 1909 exhibit, was the son of a wealthy textile manufacturer and held a degree in physics.
Aviation in France quickly took on an unmistakably national character, inspired by the likelihood of war with Germany.
Still, the aviation madness of the crowds who flocked to airshows and races would have counted for little if the French government had not responded by investing large sums of money in the purchase of airplanes, nourishing an aviation industry that could never have survived on private purchases.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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