a
.
m
.
Orville was at the controls. The flight only lasted
twelve seconds, but it was the first powered, manned, heavier-
than-air controlled flight.
The W right bothers built a second machine, but their total
flying time in 1904 was only forty-five minutes. Then they
learned how to turn the airplane, and in October 1905 they
made a flight that covered thirty-nine kilometers in thirty-eight
minutes and three seconds.
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The First World War
In the next few years, flying progressed very quickly. Louis Bleriot
became the first person to fly an airplane from France to England
in 1909. Worried about war, all sides began to look at the possible
uses of airplanes. At the beginning of the war, airplanes were
mainly used for watching the positions of enemy soldiers. Soon,
though, there were hundreds on each side of the front line.
At first, fighting between machines was limited to guns in the
hands of the pilots. Early German two-seater machines were
flown by a pilot who carried an officer with a rifle, but soon the
officers started to fly the airplane themselves.
Because of the problem of firing a machine gun through a
propeller, the first fighter airplanes were two-seaters. These either
had a moveable gun behind the pilot, or a propeller behind and a
gunner in front. Then, in 1915, the Dutch engineer Anthony
Fokker, who owned a factory in Germany, invented a machine to
time the gun so it could fire through a front propeller. The new
single-seater Fokker fighter had a great advantage and shot down
many airplanes until the British and French were able to copy his
idea.
Although parachutes existed— the first jump, from a balloon,
had been made in 1797— neither side was willing to give them
to pilots. British commanders said that if pilots had a parachute,
they might jum p out at the first sign of trouble. It is also possible
that there was another reason. If the British gave parachutes to
their pilots, the Germans might do the same. And since most
fighting between airplanes took place on the German side of the
lines, the Germans would get their shot-down pilots back while
the British wouldn’t.
In the First World War, airships were also used for fighting.
The first flight of the German machine, the Zeppelin, had taken
place in 1900, and there were 159 attacks on Britain using
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airships of this type, during which 557 people were killed. They
did little real damage, but forced the British to keep many fighter
airplanes at home to defend the country.
Flying around the world
After the war, the airship was seen as the future of passenger
travel, but after the crash of the British R101 in France in 1930,
Britain stopped using them. Germany continued until 1937,
when the Hindenburg was destroyed by fire at Lakehurst, New
Jersey, and thirty-six people lost their lives.
During the 1920s and 1930s, airplanes flew further and further.
The Atlantic Ocean was crossed in 1919 by two British officers, John
Alcock and Albert Brown. They took off from Newfoundland,
Canada, in a Vickers bomber and landed in the west of Ireland
sixteen hours and twenty-seven minutes later. It was a difficult
flight, some of the time through fog and snow. Brown had to
climb out onto the wings four times to cut ice from the engines.
Eight years later, Charles Lindbergh made the first flight by
one person, in an airplane called The Spirit of St. Louis. The
following year another American, Amelia Earhart, became the
first woman to fly across the ocean, although, as she said herself,
she was really a passenger on an airplane flown by two men. She
did it alone, though, in May 1932. She was the first woman to fly
across the Atlantic alone, and she was the first person to do it
alone since Lindbergh. Earhart made a number of other long
distance flights before she was lost over the Pacific in 1937 while
she was trying to fly around the world.
War and peace
In September 1923, US airplanes had bombed the old warships
Virginia and New Jersey as a test. Both had been sunk within a few
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minutes. During the war, the usefulness of air power was shown
time after time until all countries learned that warships needed
airplanes to protect them, and that the most important ship was
now one that could carry airplanes. The war between the US
and Japan in the Pacific was fought between carriers that never
went near each other.
In the Second World War, bombing was used in a new and
terrible way. Many cities were burned, and a new type of bomb
was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, in Japan, in 1946.
After this war, people looked again at the peaceful uses of air
power, and in the 1950s and 60s air travel became possible for
more and more people. The de Havilland Comet, which first
flew in 1952, was the first airplane built especially to carry
passengers. But after three crashes in two years, it was taken out
of the air. Its square windows led to weaknesses in the body of
the airplane. Although later Comets with round windows flew,
the rriost popular airplanes by that time were built by the
American companies Boeing and Douglas.
In 1969, Britain and France produced the Concorde, the first
passenger airplane to fly faster than the speed of sound. Many
people thought that the future had arrived, but the real change had
happened two years earlier when the slower but enormous Boeing
747s began to fly. People realized that it was too expensive, noisy,
and dirty to fly faster than the speed of sound. The future for
passenger travel was increasing numbers of slower flights.
The first helicopter had been flown in 1907, when Paul
Cornu, a French inventor, built a machine that stayed thirty
centimeters off the ground for twenty seconds. Then in 1939, the
Russian Igor Sikorsky built a usable machine. It stayed up over an
airport in Stratford, Connecticut, for one hour and five minutes
mi
1941, piloted by Sikorsky himself. Little progress was made
with helicopters in the Second World War, although they were
used greatly in later wars in Korea and Vietnam. In the world
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today, helicopters have a large number of peacetime uses— as air
ambulances, for police work and traffic control, as well as for
travel.
The first rocket to actually fly and work was the German V2,
first fired against England in September 1944. V2s continued to
land on southern England until March of the following year,
when the British army reached the part of Germany they were
fired from. A number of German V2 scientists later worked for
the American and Russian space programs. In March 1946, the
first American-built rocket reached a height of eighty
kilometers, and in 1961 Yuri Gagarin became the first human
being to travel in space when he flew once around the Earth.
The space race, as it was called, continued through the 1960s;
both the United States and the Soviet Union sent up better and
better rockets. In time, the Americans passed the Russians and on
20 July 1969, Neil Armstrong became the first person to walk on
the moon.
The space program slowed down after this, although a space
station, Skylab, was sent up in 1973. Eight years later, Columbia
became the first vehicle to go into space and return to Earth. In
2004, Rover Spirit successfully landed on Mars. Americans plan to
return human beings to the moon by 2020; these people will,
they hope, build a scientific station and prepare to travel to Mars.
At one time, people used to say, “The sky’s the limit.” These days,
this isn’t true.
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