Today in Aviation History - February

ausrere

Pattern Altitude
Joined
Feb 22, 2005
Messages
1,682
Location
Austin, TX
Display Name

Display name:
Lisa
Let's try this again in the right month :D:

February 1


In 1851... Englishman William Dean makes the first balloon ascent in Australia, flying the Australasia for about 7 miles over Melbourne.

In 1911... Burgess and Curtiss become the US’s first licensed aircraft manufacturer.

In 1929... The aviation and space operations of Boeing and Pratt&Whitney are merged to form the United Aircraft&Transport Corp.

In 1930... San Francisco’s first air ferry service starts to operate, cutting journey time across the Bay to 6 minutes. The ferry flies from San Francisco to Alameda, and from Oakland to Vallejo.

In 1933... The last Boeing biplane designed and built in Seattle, the Model 236 (XF6B-1), based on the F4B/P-12 series, makes its first flight.

In 1950... Eight Grumman F9F Panthers land on the USS Valley Forge to complete the first aircraft carrier night landing trials by jets.

In 1964... President Lyndon Johnson publicly acknowledges the existence of the Lockheed A-12 Mach 3+ spy plane program and shows a picture that is actually an YF-12A.

In 1971... The 4,000th McDonnell Phantom, an F-4E for the Air Force, is delivered.

In 1975... A McDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagle completes its sweep of all eight world time-to-climb world records by streaking to an altitude of 98,425 feet in less than 3.5 minutes.

In 1981... Donald W. Douglas, founder of the Douglas Aircraft Company, dies (b. 1892).

In 1992... British Aerospace’s latest Hawk demonstrator, Hawk Mk 102D, ZJ 100, takes to the skies for the first time. It is an enhanced two-seater ground-attack version with a modified wing and incorporates many improvements to its onboard sensors and weapons system.

In 2003... Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrates during reentry into the Earth's atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts aboard. The crew aboard was: Michael P. Anderson (b. 1959), David Brown (b. 1956), Kalpana Chawla (b. 1961), Laurel Clark (b. 1961), Rick D. Husband (b. 1957), Willie McCool (b. 1961), Ilan Ramon (b. 1954).
 
February 2


In 1918... The first operational squadrons of the American Expeditionary Force are formed in France.

In 1929... The Boeing Airplane and Transport Corp. changes its name to United Aircraft and Transportation Corp. and by the end of the year had expanded its operations to include Chance Vought Corp., Hamilton Metalplane Division, Boeing Aircraft of Canada, Stout Airlines, Northrop Aircraft Corp., Stearman Aircraft Co., Sikorsky Aviation Corp., Standard Steel Propeller Co. and Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Co.

In 1950... Japan Air Lines inaugurates its first international service: a twice-weekly route to San Francisco.

In 1974... The F-16 Fighting Falcon flies for the first time.

In 1989... People Express flies its last service from Newark, New Jersey, to New York; it has been taken over by Continental Airlines.

In 1998... A Cebu Pacific Air DC-9-32 crashes into a mountain near Cagayan de Oro, Philippines, killing 104.
 
Seeing how this sad news affects most pilots, I figure this is noteworthy on this day....

Phil Says Six More Weeks of Winter!

Phil's official forecast as read 2/2/08 at sunrise at Gobbler's Knob:
Here Ye! Here Ye! Here Ye!
On Gobbler's Knob on this fabulous Groundhog Day, February 2nd, 2008
Punxsutawney Phil, the Seer of Seers, Prognosticator of all Prognosticators,
Rose to the call of President Bill Cooper and greeted his handlers, Ben Hughes and John Griffiths.
After casting a weathered eye toward thousands of his faithful followers,
Phil consulted with President Cooper and directed him to the appropriate scroll, which proclaimed:
"As I look around me, a bright sky I see, and a shadow beside me.
Six more weeks of winter it will be!"

phil08.jpg


Thanks, Phil!
splat.gif
 
February 3


In 1934... The first scheduled trans-Atlantic airmail service between Berlin, Germany, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is inaugurated by Luft Hansa. The journey is made in four stages.

In 1946... Pan American inaugurates the first commercial use of Lockheed Model 049 Constellation with the aircraft’s first scheduled service between New York and Bermuda.

In 1948... All 145 pilots and co-pilots at National Airlines go on strike, grounding the carrier’s 22 aircrafts. The dispute is mainly over air safety.

In 1959... A Beechcraft Bonanza crash near Clear Lake, Iowa kills Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and The Big Bopper.

In 1964... The Federal Aviation Agency launches Operation Bongo Mark 2 to investigate the effects of supersonic flight; over the coming months, a Convair B-58 will fly through the sound barrier at low altitude over Oklahoma City.

In 1982... A Mil Mi-26 helicopter sets a world record in the U.S.S.R., lifting 125,153.8 lb. to a height of 6,562 feet.

In 1984... Astronauts, Bruce McCandless II and Robert L. Stewart make first untethered spacewalks using the Manned Maneuvering Unit.

In 1998... A United States Marine Corps EA-6B Prowler cut a cable supporting a gondola, causing the death of 20 people. The two pilots, Captain Richard J. Ashby and his navigator Captain Joseph Schweitzer, were put under trial in the United States, but were found not guilty of of involuntary manslaughter and negligent homicide, but later they were found guilty of obstruction of justice for having destroyed evidence. Both were discharged from the Marines.
 
February 4

In 1902... Charles Lindbergh, American pilot, was born (d. 1974). Charles Augustus Lindbergh, also known as "Lucky Lindy" and "The Lone Eagle," was an American pilot famous for the first solo, non-stop flight across the Atlantic, from Roosevelt Field, Long Island to Paris in 1927 in the "Spirit of St. Louis."

In 1945... US President Franklin D. Roosevelt touches down at Yalta, the Crimean resort, in his presidential airplane Sacred Cow for a crucial summit with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The leaders are meeting to discuss terms for German surrender and the shape of post-war Europe.

In 1949... In the US, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) gives authorization for the full use of ground control approach (GCA) landing aids. These will be used only in conditions of poor visibility caused by fog or bad weather and comprise a ground radar system.

In 1958... The world’s first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the CVAN-65 USS Enterprise is laid down at the Newport News shipyard.

In 1966... All Nippon Airways Boeing 727 jet plunges into Tokyo Bay, killing 133.
 
Last edited:
February 5

In 1919... The first regular, daily passenger service in the world is launched at Berlin’s city airfield. A German airline, Deutsche Luft Reederei, operates the new service on route from Berlin to Weimar via Leipzig.

In 1929... Frank Hawks and Oscar Grubb land their Lockheed Air Express in New York after a record flight of 18 hours 20 minutes from Los Angeles.

In 1949... An Eastern Air Lines Lockheed Constellation lands at LaGuardia, New York, at the end of a flight of 6 hours 18 minutes from Los Angeles, a coast-to-coast record for transport aircraft.

In 1951... The United States and Canada announce the establishment of the Distant Early Warning (DEW), the air defense system that uses more than 30 radar stations located across the northern portion of the continent.

In 1958... A hydrogen bomb known as the Tybee Bomb is lost by the US Air Force off the coast of Savannah, Georgia, never to be recovered. The bomb was jettisoned during a practice exercise after a B-47 bomber carrying it collided in midair with an F-86 fighter plane. It is presumed lost somewhere in Wassaw Sound off the shores of Tybee Island.

In 1962... A Sikorsky HSS-2 Sea King of the US Navy sets a world helicopter speed record of 210.6 mph, in the course of a flight between Milford and New Haven, Connecticut.

In 1971... Apollo 14 Mission - Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell aboard LM, Antares land on the Moon at Fra Mauro formation.
 
February 4

In 1902... Charles Lindbergh, American pilot, was born (d. 1974). Charles Augustus Lindbergh, also known as "Lucky Lindy" and "The Lone Eagle," was an American pilot famous for the first solo, non-stop flight across the Atlantic, from Roosevelt Field, Long Island to Paris in 1927 in the "Spirit of St. Louis."

In 1920... Charles Augustus Lindbergh (1920-1974), one of the most famous aviators in history, is born in Detroit, Michigan.

I think your source needs to check itself. The second entry would have him 7 years old when he flew to Paris. :D
 
I think your source needs to check itself. The second entry would have him 7 years old when he flew to Paris. :D

Nah... source was right, my fingers were wrong. :D Typo: fixed. Thanks. (Actually I just removed the whole duplicate line.)
 
February 6

In 1916... The airline Deutsche Luft Reederei flies its first service, which is freight only, between Berlin and Weimar.

In 1946... A TWA Lockheed Constellation lands at Orly airport, Paris, from LaGuardia, New York, to complete the airline’s first scheduled international flight.

In 1956... William Judd lands his Cessna 180 in Paris after a solo flight of 25 hours 15 minutes across the North Atlantic from the US.

In 1996... A Birgen Air Boeing 757 crashes into the Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Dominican Republic killing 189.

In 1998... Washington National Airport is renamed Ronald Reagan National Airport.
 
In 2003... Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrates during reentry into the Earth's atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts aboard. The crew aboard was: Michael P. Anderson (b. 1959), David Brown (b. 1956), Kalpana Chawla (b. 1961), Laurel Clark (b. 1961), Rick D. Husband (b. 1957), Willie McCool (b. 1961), Ilan Ramon (b. 1954).

:(:(:(

I still have a few pieces of Columbia that I got as souvenirs from the STS-3 flight when I worked at Cape Canaveral.
 
February 7

In 1920... French aviator Sadi Lacointe, piloting a Nieuport-Delage 29V, becomes the first pilot to set a new Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI) world speed record after World War I. He reaches a measured speed of 275.862 km/h (171.141 mph) along 1 km (3,280 ft.) course.

In 1927... Georgetown University medical school in Washington, D.C., offers the first aviation medicine course in the United States.

In 1932... Alfred Merrill Worden, American astronaut, was born. Worden was the command module pilot for the Apollo 15 moon mission in July-August 1971.

In 1937... The prototype Blackburn B.24 Skua two-seat fighter/dive-bomber makes its maiden flight, piloted by “Dasher” Blake at Brough, Yorkshire; it is Britain’s first dive-bomber.

In 1958... One of the best British soccer teams, Manchester United, has been virtually wiped out in an air crash. The team was returning from Belgrade after victory against a Yugoslav opponent when their British European Airways (BEA) Airspeed AS.57 Ambassador failed to take off and crashed into a house in Munich, Germany.
 
February 8


In 1908... Flight tests begin at Issy-les-Moulineaux for the Gastambide-Mengin I monoplane, built by Léon Levavasseur and fitted with a 50-hp Antoinette engine.

In 1919... The Farman brothers make the first scheduled international flight in Europe when a Farman F.60 Goliath piloted by M. Lucien Bossoutrot carries a token load of military passengers between Toussus le Noble airfield outside Paris and Kenley in southern England.

In 1933... The first Boeing 247 takes to the air opening a new era in air transport, representing the new age of all-metal monoplane designs.

In 1949... The Boeing B-47 sets a transcontinental speed record, covering 2,289 miles in 3 hours and 46 minutes, at an average speed of 607.8 mph.

In 1988... The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) retires an aircraft registration number for the first time – that of Amelia Earhart’s airplane, which disappeared over the Pacific in July 1937.

In 1989... An Independent Air Boeing 707 crashes into Santa Maria mountain in Azores Islands off the coast of Portugal, killing 144.
 
February 9

In 1897... Charles Kingsford Smith, Australian pilot, was born (d. 1935). Sir Charles Edward Kingsford "Smithy" Smith made the first trans-Pacific flight from the United States to Australia. He also made the first non-stop crossing of the Australian mainland, the first flights between Australia and New Zealand, and the first eastward Pacific crossing from Australia to the United States.

In 1934... Douglas O-35s and B-7s are flown by the Army Air Corps after President Roosevelt cancels commercial airmail contracts.

In 1936... Tommy Rose lands at Wingfield Aerodrome in Cape Town, South Africa, after a record flight from England of 3 days 17 hours 38 minutes.

In 1939... British flyer Alex Henshaw lands his Percival Mew Gull at Gravesend in Kent, England, after a record flight to Cape Town and back in 4 days 10 hours and 20 minutes.

In 1969... First flight of the Boeing 747 “Jumbo Jet” airliner takes place in Seattle, Washington. The wide-bodied, long-range transport is capable of carrying 347 passengers, and is the largest aircraft in commercial airline service in the world.

In 1995... Space Shuttle astronauts Bernard A. Harris, Jr. and Michael Foale become the first African American and first Briton, respectively, to perform spacewalks.

In 1997... The first Next-Generation Boeing 737, a 737-700, makes its first flight.
 
February 10

In 1923... An experimental night flight arrives to Le Bourget, France, from Croydon, England. The pilot has given his position by radio and used the aviation light beacons to make his approach.

In 1962... American U-2 pilot Gary Powers, shot down and arrested in the U.S.S.R. in May 1960, is released in exchange for Soviet spy Colonel Rudolf Abel.
 
February 11


In 1909... An important pioneer in developing aviation in New Zealand, Vivian C. Walsh pilots a Howard-Wright biplane on what is generally considered the first flight in New Zealand by a powered airplane.

In 1914... Distance record for balloons over land is set by H. Berliner, who flies 1,890 miles (c. 3,040 km) from Bitterfeldt, Germany to Kirgischano, Russia.

In 1939... Lockheed P-38 flies from California to New York in 7 hours 2 minutes.

In 1946... The United States and United Kingdom sign an agreement in Bermuda setting out the principles by which air rates and frequencies of international services should be set. The Bermuda Agreement becomes a standard upon which air agreements would be based in the future.

In 1959... A US meteorological balloon achieves a record height of 146,000 ft. carrying a special package of detectors sending information by radio signal to the ground.

In 2000... Jacqueline Auriol, French aviatrix, dies (b. 1917). Auriol earned a military pilot license in 1950 then qualified as one of the first female test pilots. She was among the first women to break the sound barrier and set five world speed records. Her exploits earned her the Harmon Trophy in 1951 and again in 1952.
 
February 12

In 1914... Igor Sikorsky’s giant four-engined biplane, the Ilya Muromets flies in Russia. It is an improved version of last year’s Bolshoi Baltiskii.

In 1921... The U.S. Army Air Service establishes the first in an expending series of airways – routes safely surveyed by the army civilian and commercial users linking towns and cities by air – by leasing land between Washington and Dayton, Ohio to facilitate a stopover.

In 1928... Lady Heath (formerly Mrs. Elliot-Lynn) becomes the first woman to fly solo from Cape Town, South Africa to London, England.

In 1959... The last Convair B-36 bomber in operational USAF service is retired to Amon Carter Field, where it is put on display; Strategic Air Command is now equipped with an all-jet bomber force.

In 1960... A Delta Air Lines Convair 880 lands in Miami, Florida, from San Diego to set a new transcontinental speed record over the route of 3 hours 31 minutes.

In 2002... An Iran Air Tupolev Tu-154 crashes prior to landing in Khorramabad, Iran, killing 119.
 
February 13

In 1913... At the second British Aero Show in London, the world’s first airplane specifically designed to carry a gun, 37-mm cannon on biplane, is displayed for the first time. Called Destroyer and built by Vickers, Sons & Maxim, it is officially called the Experimental Fighting Biplane No.1 (E.F.B.1).

In 1919... The first post-war French commercial service is established on a route from Paris to Lille for the carriage of food and clothing to France’s northern departments.

In 1923... Chuck Yeager, American fighter & test pilot, and the first person to break the "sound barrier" in level flight, is born (1947).

In 1943... The Vought F4U Corsair naval fighter makes its operational debut in Solomon Island, escorting PB4Y-1 Liberators (the US Navy’s version of the B-24) raiding Bougainville.

In 1972... The Soviet Union has started to use Cuba as a base from which to spy on the US. The first mission is flown by two Soviet Tu-95, which surveys part of the east cost.

In 2006... The 5,000th 737 comes off the production line. The 737 is the most-produced large commercial jet airplane in aviation history.
 
February 14

In 1914... An official American nonstop duration and distance record is made when Lt. Townsend Dodd and Sgt. Herbert Marcus fly the U.S. Signal Corps Burgess H tractor biplane. (S.C. No. 26) 244.8 mi. in 4 hours 43 minutes. Although it established a record for two people in one airplane, it also exceeded the previous single-seat record.

In 1932... Ruth Nichols flies her Lockheed Vega from Floyd Bennett Field, New York to an altitude of 19,928 feet, a new world record for diesel-engined airplanes.

In 1934... Howard R. Hughes launches the Hughes Tool Co. aircraft division, which evolves into Hughes Helicopters Inc.

In 1942... The Douglas C-54 Skymaster makes its first flight. Designed as the DC-4, it is adapted for military use. During the war Skymasters complete 79,632 transoceanic flights with only three ditchings, one of which was a test.

In 1980... Japan Air Lines begins commercial operations with the highest-capacity airliner ever put into scheduled service, conducting the inaugural flight of eight Boeing 747SR. The aircraft has seating for 550 passengers, 45 in the upper deck.

In 1990... 92 people are killed aboard Indian Airlines Flight 605 that crashed on its final approach to Bangalore airport, India.
 
February 15

In 1910... King Edward VII grants the title “Royal” to the Aero Club of the United Kingdom.

In 1926... The Ford Motor Co. becomes the first U.S. private air carrier to operate a contract airmail (CAM) route. Ford begins operations with CAM-6 between Detroit and Chicago and CAM-7 between Detroit and Cleveland.

In 1935... Roger Chaffee, astronaut, is born (d. 1967) . was a U.S. Navy pilot who became an American astronaut in the Apollo program. Chaffee died along with fellow astronauts Virgil "Gus" Grissom and Edward White in the Apollo 1 fire at Cape Kennedy.

In 1941... The military prototype of the Douglas DC-6, the YC-122, makes its first flight.

In 1961... Members of a US skating team are among 73 killed when Belgian airliner Sabena Boeing 707 crashes during its landing approach near Brussels, Belgium.

In 1965... Mrs. Guy Maher arrives from Culver City, California to Medford, New Jersey in a Hughes 300 to complete the USA’s first transcontinental helicopter flight by a woman.

In 1970... A Dominican DC-9 crashes into the sea during takeoff from Santo Domingo, killing 102.

In 2005... The first 777-200LR Worldliner, the world's longest range commercial airplane is rolled out in Everett, Wash. It can carry 301 passengers up to 9,420 nautical miles.
 
February 16


In 1912... Frank Coffyn takes aerial views of New York City with a cinema camera while controlling his airplane with his feet and knees.

In 1922... Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer, German fighter ace, was born. Schnaufer was the top night fighter ace of all time. He flew with the German Luftwaffe during the Second World War. All his 121 victories were scored at night, most against British four-engine bombers. He was nicknamed "The Night Ghost Of St. Trond".

In 1960... The Vought F8U-2N Crusader interceptor makes its maiden flight in Dallas, Texas.

In 1982... The first production Airbus Industries A310 is rolled out at the factory in Toulouse, France, destined for Swissair as the launch customer.
 
Last edited:
February 16


In 1982... Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer, German fighter ace, was born. Schnaufer was the top night fighter ace of all time. He flew with the German Luftwaffe during the Second World War. All his 121 victories were scored at night, most against British four-engine bombers. He was nicknamed "The Night Ghost Of St. Trond".

Uh, I don't think so. WW II ended in 1945. :D
 
February 17

In 1904... The Wright brothers inspect the grounds where the St. Louis aeronautical exposition will be held in April.

In 1934... The first airmail flight from Australia to New Zealand is flown by Charles T. Ulm in his Avro Ten, a license-built Fokker F. VIIB/3m registered as VH-UXX.

In 1956... Lockheed YF-104A Starfighter makes it's first flight at Edwards Airforce Base, piloted by Tony LeVier.
 
February 17

In 1904... The Wright brothers inspect the grounds where the St. Louis aeronautical exposition will be held in April.
The debut of the ice cream cone was one of the more important events at the 1904 fair. Though, some New Yorker claimed to have already invented it prior to the fair.
 
February 18


In 1832... Octave Chanute (1832-1910), first great historian of aviation, is born in Paris, France. Brought to the US when young, Chanute was a civilian engineer before turning to aviation. In 1894 he published Progress in Flying Machines. The book became a bible for the Wright brothers.

In 1911... The first official flight with air mail takes place in Allahabad, British India, when Henri Pequet, a 23-year-old pilot, delivers 6,500 letters to Naini, about 10 km away.

In 1930... Elm Farm Ollie becomes the first cow to fly in a fixed-wing aircraft and also the first cow to be milked in an aircraft.

In 1943... Prototype of the Boeing B-29 crashes, killing test pilot Eddie Allen, the crew and 19 on the ground. The following year the company will invest $750,000 in the largest and fastest wind tunnel ever built and will name it after Eddie Allen.

In 1952... The first North American AJ-2 Savage bomber flies.

In 1957... After 12 years of production, Douglas delivers the last of 3,180 AD Skyraiders to the Navy.

In 1969... Hawthorne Nevada Airlines Flight 708 disaster kills occurs. Flight 708, a DC-3, crashed into the tallest mountain in the Continental United States, Mount Whitney, near Lone Pine, killing all 35 passengers and crew on board.

In 1973... Daniel Bouchart and Didier Potelle land 19,568 feet up on the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania in an SA 319 B Alouette II helicopter.

In 1977... The converted Boeing 747 space shuttle carrier makes its first flight with the shuttle Enterprise on its back, at NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center.
 
February 19

In 1912... One of the most successful pre-World War I airship operations begins with the first flight of the Zeppelin LZ II, Victoria Louise, and its introduction into service with the German airship company DELAG.

In 1934... The Douglas DC-1 makes record coast-to-coast flight, Los Angeles to Newark, N.J., in 13 hours, 4 minutes.

In 1936... Billy Mitchell, American general and military aviation pioneer, dies (b. 1879). William Lendrum "Billy" Mitchell was an American general who is regarded as the father of the U.S. Air Force.

In 1937... Howard Hughes establishes a new transcontinental speed record of 7 hours 28 minutes 25 seconds from Los Angeles to Newark, New Jersey.

In 1952... Rodolfo Neri Vela, Mexican astronaut, was born. Vela became the first Mexican to fly in space when he was a Payload Specialist aboard the STS-61-B Atlantis mission, from November 26 to December 3, 1985.

In 1982... The first Boeing 757 takes to the air on its maiden flight. With capacity for between 178 and 239 passengers in a wide variety of configurations, it has a cruising speed of 528 mph and a range of 2,100 mi., or 5,343 mi. at economic cruise.

In 1985... Iberia Airlines Boeing 727 crashes into Mount Oiz in Spain, killing 148.

In 1987... The Boeing E-6A TACAMO prototype flies for the first time.
 
February 20


In 1915... During the Panama-Pacific Exhibition, Allan Loughead is allowed to launch an air service and flies 600 passengers across the bay during 50 days. The 10-minute flight costs $10 per passenger.

In 1924... In Dakar, Lieutenant-Colonel Tulasne, Captain Gama and Lieutenant Michel complete the first trip across the Sahara desert and back, piloting Breguet-14 airplanes.

In 1942... Lieutenant Edward O'Hare becomes America's first World War II flying ace.

In 1962... While aboard Friendship 7, John Glenn orbits the earth three times in 4 hours, 55 minutes, becoming the first American to orbit the earth.

In 1968... A standard Learjet 25 sets a new “time-to-climb” record by climbing to 40,000 feet in 6 minutes 29 seconds.

In 1972... A USAF Lockheed HC-130H Hercules piloted by a crew commanded by Lt. Comdr. Ed Allison sets a new world record for unrefuelled flight by turboprop aircraft. It flies a distance of 14,052.94 km (8,732.5 mi.) between the Taiwanese base of Ching Chuan Kang AB and Scott AFB, Illinois.
 
February 21


In 1911... A new 1910 Wright Type B Flyer owned by Collier’s magazine publisher Robert F. Collier, arrives at San Antonio, Texas on rent to the U.S. Army for $1.00 per month to supplement the aging Wright biplane first accepted on August 2, 1909.

In 1919... The prototype of the first US-designed fighter to enter large-scale production, the Thomas-Morse MB-3 (to be made by Boeing), makes its maiden flight.

In 1953... Bell X-1A makes it's first powered flight at Edwards Airforce base, piloted by Jean E Ziegler.

In 1964... Mark E. Kelly and Scott J. Kelly, Twin brothers and American astronauts, were born.

In 1970... Swissair Flight 330: A mid-air bomb explosion and subsequent crash kills 38 passengers and nine crew members near Zürich, Switzerland.

In 1979... Former astronaut Neil Armstrong climbs to 50,000 feet in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina in just over 12 minutes in a Gates Learjet Longhorn 28, breaking five world records for business jets.

In 1980... Rockwell's Sabreliner Model 80 sets a long-range flight record for its class, flying 2,653 miles from Boston, Mass., to Paris at 528 mph.

In 1984... Racing driver Henri Pescarolo and Air France pilot Patrick Fourticq land their Piper Malibu in Paris after a flight from New York, setting a speed record of 14 hours 2 minutes for a single-engined lift aircraft across the North Atlantic.

In 1995... Steve Fossett lands in Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada becoming the first person to make a solo flight across the Pacific Ocean in a balloon.
 
February 22

In 1912... The Fokker Aviatik G.m.b.H. company is entered in the trade register at Berlin, Germany with a quoted capital of 20,000 marks. The company’s Holland-born founder, Anthony Herman Gerard Fokker, was brought up in Haarlem, the Netherlands and moved to Germany where he developed a passion for aviation before designing his first airplane – the Spider No. 1 – in late 1910.

In 1925... Geoffrey de Havilland takes off in his newly built D.H.60 Moth G-EBKT, heralding a new age of light aviation.

In 1928... Australian Bert Hinkler lands at Fanny Bay in Darwin, Australia after 11,000-mile solo flight from England. He is the first to make such a trip, setting four other new records: longest solo flight, longest light plane flight, first nonstop flight from London to Rome and fastest journey from Britain to India.

In 1993... The McDonnell Douglas MD-90 commercial transport makes its first flight.
 
February 23

In 1909... John A. McCurdy flies the Aerial Experimental Association’s Silver Dart biplane 40 feet over the frozen Bras d’Or lake at Baddeck Bay – the first flight of a heavier-than-air machine in Canada.

In 1914... Harry Busteed makes the first test flight of the Bristol Scout biplane at Larkhill training center in England.

In 1915... Paul Tibbets, US Air Force retired Brigadier General and Pilot of B-29 "Enola Gay" over Hiroshima, is born (d. 2007).

In 1921... A team of pilots completes an experimental coast-to-coast mail flight; flying by day and night, they have linked San Francisco and Long Island in a day and half’s flying time.

In 1937... Douglas delivers its first production B-18 Bolo bomber.

In 1949... Marc Garneau, French Canadian astronaut and the first Canadian in space, was born.
 
February 24


In 1898... Kurt Tank, German aeronautical engineer and test pilot, was born (d. 1983). Kurt Waldemar Tank was a resourceful German aeronautical engineer and test pilot, heading the design department at Focke-Wulf from 1931-45. He designed several important aircraft of World War II, including the Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighter aircraft.

In 1921... The first wholly Douglas-designed, Douglas-built aircraft, The Cloudster, makes its first flight. It is the first airplane to lift a useful load exceeding its own weight.

In 1921... Lieutenant William D. Coney completes a solo flight from Rockwell Field, San Diego to Jacksonville, in 22 hours and 27 minutes flying time.

In 1931... John Lankester Parker makes the first flight of the prototype Short S.17 Kent flying boat, from the river Medway in Kent, England.

In 1940... The 2,000-hp prototype Hawker Typhoon fighter makes its first flight in England.

In 1947... First flight of the North American Aviation B-45.

In 1957... Scandinavian Airline Services (SAS) opens the first regular scheduled service from Europe to the Far East over the North Pole, with departure from Copenhagen, Denmark and Tokyo, Japan; the DC-7C aircraft will circle the pole en route.

In 1983... The youngest pilot known to have made a solo flight in a powered, heavier-than-air, flying machine takes to the air for the first time at age of 9 years 316 days. The flight takes place near Mexicali, Mexico and the aircraft the boy pilots is a Cessna 150.

In 1989... United Airlines Flight 811, bound for New Zealand from Honolulu, Hawaii, rips open during flight, sucking 9 passengers out of the business-class section.

In 2003... The 777-300ER completes its first flight.
 
February 25

In 1784... The first balloon flight made in Italy takes place from the grounds of a villa owned by Chevalier Paul Andreani near Milan and uses a modified Montgolfière hot air design built by the brothers Charles and Augustin Gerli.

In 1929... The world’s first major air evacuation comes to an end when Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF) flies out the last of 586 civilians from Kabul to the safety to India. The airlift involves nationals of about 20 countries.

In 1930... Ralph O’Neil lands in Miami on the first mail service of America airline New York, Rio and Buenos Aires Line (NYRBA) between Buenos Aires and New York after a difficult 6-day flight from Argentina.

In 1965... Douglas DC-9 makes it's first flight at Edwards Airforce Base, piloted by George Jensen.

In 1970... TWA becomes the first airline to fly a “Jumbo Jet” within the US, when it inaugurates a Boeing 747 service between Los Angeles and New York.

In 1990... Smoke-free flights become mandatory throughout North America for all US airlines.
 
I was part of the crew that dispatched that first TWA 747 flight. That was a long time ago.
Ron
 
(Feb. 25) 1948: A pilotless plane took off from Nome by itself, heading for Siberia. It disappeared heading for St. Lawrence Island, after several unsuccessful attempts were made to shoot it down.

I've been unable to find a reference to this other than the above sentence in the newspaper today, but I sure would like to read more :eek: :yes:
 
February 26

In 1940... The US Air Defense Command is formed at Mitchell Field, New York.

In 1942... The luxurious Boeing Stratoliners are stripped of their civilian finery and pressed into military service as C-75s. The first flights carry antitank ammunition and medical supplies to British forces in Libya.

In 1949... A Boeing B-50 makes first nonstop refueled flight around world. American Capt. James Gallagher and Luck Lady II crew cover 23,452 miles (37,742 km) in 94 hours 1 minute and are refueled in flight four times.

In 1955... The first supersonic ejection takes place when North American test pilot George F. Smith ejects himself from his diving F-100 off Laguna Beach, California. He is unconscious for five days but recovers.
 
February 27


In 1920... Major Rudolph W. Schroeder of the US Army Air Service sets a new world altitude record when he flies to the height of 33,143 feet. During the flight over McCook Field in Dayton, Ohio he nearly loses his life when his oxygen system fails.

In 1935... Latècoère’s giant seaplane Santos Dumont lands with a cargo of mail after a record flight of 53 hours 4 minutes from Natal, Brazil to Paris, with two stops en route.

In 1965... The world’s largest aircraft at the time, the Antonov An-22 Antei, makes its first flight. It is powered by four 15,000 EHP Kuznetsov NK-12 turboprop engines.

In 2002... Ryanair Flight 296 catches fire in London Stansted Airport. Subsequent investigations criticize Ryanair's handling of the evacuation.

In 1963... The first flight of Hughes OH-6A Cayuse light observation helicopter.

In 1979... The Navy takes delivery of the last of 2,960 McDonnell Douglas Skyhawk fighters
 
February 28

In 1900... Wolfram Hirth, German pilot, was born (d. 1959). Wolfram Kurt Erhard Hirth was a German gliding pioneer and sailplane designer. He was a co-founder of Schempp-Hirth, one of the most renowned sailplane manufacturers in the world today.

In 1907... Cabinet-maker Charles Voisin begins tests of the airplane made by his company for Lèon Delagrange. He takes off for a hop of several feet, but the fuselage breaks up.

In 1918... Regulation of the airways begins as US President Woodrow Wilson issues an order requiring licenses for civilian pilots and owners. Over 800 licenses are issued.

In 1921... Pierre Clostermann, French World War II pilot, was born (d. 2006). Colstermann was a French flying ace, author, engineer and politician.

In 1929... An amendment to the Air Commerce Act, effective in June, provides for the federal licensing of flying schools.

In 1947... A North American P-82B Twin Mustang sets a nonstop distance record for fighters flying 4,968 miles from Honolulu, Hawaii, to New York in 14 hours and 31 minutes at an average speed of 341.9 mph.

In 1954... Lockheed XF-104 Starfighter makes it's first flight at Edwards Airforce Base, piloted by Tony LeVier.

In 1998... First flight of RQ-4 Global Hawk, first unmanned aerial vehicle certified to file its own flight plans and fly regularly in U.S. civilian airspace.


While not "technically" Aviation History, I thought this was worth a mention since I think of helicopters everytime I see this show:

In 1983... The final episode of M*A*S*H is broadcast in the USA, becoming the most watched television episode in history, with 106–125 million viewers in the U.S. (estimate varies by source).
 
February 28


In 1947... A North American P-82B Twin Mustang sets a nonstop distance record for fighters flying 4,968 miles from Honolulu, Hawaii, to New York in 14 hours and 31 minutes at an average speed of 341.9 mph.

I hope those two pilots had nice seat cushions. That's a long time to go without being able to move much. CDG to ORD in a 767 followed by ORD to SEA in an A-320 was bad enough yesterday. :D
 
While not "technically" Aviation History, I thought this was worth a mention since I think of helicopters everytime I see this show:

In 1983... The final episode of M*A*S*H is broadcast in the USA, becoming the most watched television episode in history, with 106–125 million viewers in the U.S. (estimate varies by source).
Goodbye, Farewell, and Amen! I still remember watching that! (I'd forgotten it was that long ago, or that I'm that old!:hairraise:)
 
February 29

In 1936... Jack Lousma, American astronaut, was born. Lousma served as a member of the astronaut support crews for the Apollo 9, 10, and 13 missions. He was the pilot of Skylab 3 (SL-3) (July 28 to September 25, 1973). Lousma famously was the capcom recipient of the "Houston we've had a problem" message from Apollo 13.

In 1996... A Peruvian Boeing 737 crashes in the Andes, killing 123 people.
 
Back
Top