Friday, September 14, 2012

"The day the Navy learned it could fly from ships"







 








 


I believe that anyone who is and was Navy will particularly enjoy this. WH.

The day the Navy learned it could fly from ships




One hundred years is a very long time. Yet in the hierarchy of modern marvels, the

ability to recover and launch aircraft from the deck of a moving ship stands out as

one of our signature accomplishments. Which just goes to show you:

Some tricks never grow old.






Naval aviation was invented one hundred years ago, on January 18, 1911, when a 24-

year-old barnstormer pilot named Eugene B. Ely completed the world's first successful

landing on a ship. It happened in San Francisco Bay, aboard the cruiser USS Pennsylvania,

which had a temporary 133-foot wooden landing strip built above her afterdeck and gun
turret as part of the experiment.










Ely accomplished his feat just eight years after the Wright Brothers made their first

flight at Kitty Hawk . His aircraft was rudimentary: a Curtiss Model D "Pusher" biplane,

equipped with a 60 hp V-8 engine that gave the aircraft a 50 mph airspeed. To get a

sense of how simple it was, behold a contemporary replica of Ely's 1911 Curtiss Pusher
that was built to celebrate this 100th anniversary:





But back then, innovation was afoot. Ely's Curtis Pusher had been fitted with a clever

new invention called a tailhook. The idea was to quickly halt the aircraft after landing

by using the tailhook to catch one or two of 22 rope lines. Each propped up a foot

above the deck and weighted by 50-pound sandbags tied to each end -- Strung three
feet apart along the Pennsylvania's temporary flight deck. Mark J. Denger of the
California Center for Military History has written a tidy biography of Eugene Ely which
narrates the historic day: On the morning of January 18, 1911, Eugene Ely, in a
Curtiss pusher biplane specially equipped with arresting hooks on its axle, took off from
Selfridge Field (Tanforan Racetrack, in San Bruno , Calif. ) and headed for the San
Francisco Bay. After about 10 minutes flying North toward Goat Island
(now Yerba Buena), Eugene spotted his target through the gray haze -
the PENNSYLVANIA .





Ely's plane was first sighted one-half mile from the PENNSYLVANIA's bridge at an

altitude of 1,500 feet, cruising at a speed of approximately 60 mph. Now ten miles

out from Tanforan, he circled the several vessels of the Pacific Fleet at anchor in

San Francisco Bay . The aeroplane dipped to 400 feet as it passed directly over the MARYLAND and, still dropping, flew over the WEST VIRGINIA 's bow at an height

of only 100 feet. With a crosswind of almost 15 knots, he flew past the cruiser and
then banked some 500 yards from the PENNSYLVANIA's starboard quarter to set up
his landing approach. Ely now headed straight for the ship, cutting his engine when he
was only 75 feet from the fantail, and allowed the wind to glide the aircraft onto the
landing deck. At a speed of 40 mph Ely landed on the center line of the Pennsylvania's
deck at 11:01 a.m.





The forward momentum of his plane was quickly retarded by the ropes stretched

between the large movable sand that had been placed along the entire length of the

runway. As the plane landed, the hooks on the undercarriage caught the ropes exactly

as planned, which brought the plane to a complete stop. Once on board the PENNSYLVANIA,
sheer pandemonium broke loose as Ely was greeted with a bombardment of Cheers, boat horns
and whistles, both aboard the PENNSYLVANIA and from the surrounding vessels.





Ely was immediately greeted by his wife, Mabel, who greeted him with an enthusiastic


"I knew you could do it," and then by Captain Pond, Commanding Officer of the

PENNSYLVANIA. Then it was time for interviews and a few photographs for the
reporters. Everything had gone exactly as planned. Pond called it "the most important
landing of a bird since the dove flew back to Noah's ark." Pond would later report,
"Nothing damaged, and not a bolt or brace startled, and Ely the coolest man on board." (NOTE: Safety first! Check out Ely's inner-tube life preserver!)




After completing several interviews, Ely was escorted to the Captain's cabin where he

and his wife were the honored guests at an officers lunch. While they dined, the landing

platform was cleared and the plane turned around in preparation for takeoff. Then the

Ely's, Pond and the others posed for photographs. 57 minutes later, he made a perfect
take-off from the platform, returning to Selfridge Field at the Tanforan racetrack
where another tremendous ovation awaited him.





Both the landing and takeoff were witnessed by several distinguished members of

both U.S. Army and Navy, as well as state military officials..

Ely had successfully demonstrated the possibility of the aircraft carrier.




Indeed. The US Navy's first aircraft carrier, the USS Langley, was commissioned in

1922, eleven years later. But Ely didn't live to witness the milestone; he died just a

few months after his historic flight, on October 11, 1911, when he was thrown from

his aircraft during a crash at an air show. But 100 years ago, he merged the power of
naval warships and aviation in ways that remain cutting-edge, even today.

 

 


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