Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Ernest Archdeacon (23 March 1863 – 3 January 1950) was a French lawyer and aviation pioneer before the First World War. He made his first balloon flight at the age of 20. He commissioned a copy of the 1902 Wright No. 3 glider but had only limited success.

  2. Archdeacon himself put up the Coupe d'Aviation Ernest Archdeacon, a silver trophy that would go to the first person to fly a powered airplane 25 meters (80 feet). The Aero-Club de France offered a prize of 1500 francs to the first person to fly 100 meters, or 330 feet.

  3. Soon after, Delagrange brought Henri Farman, the son of a prominent British journalist and a French woman, to the Voison aircraft plant. Farman was a painter, cyclist, and automobile racer who had been bitten by the aviation bug.

    • ernest archdeacon son1
    • ernest archdeacon son2
    • ernest archdeacon son3
    • ernest archdeacon son4
  4. Feb 22, 2021 · He informed him that his son caused endless problems, and that he had obtained his detention at the Petite-Roquette through paternal authority. Mr Frachat informed Mr Ernest Archdeacon and his lawyer, Mr Raymond de Rienzi, that the young Tanneguy would be interviewed today.

  5. Ernest Archdeacon of France was wealthy lawyer, sportsman, and aviation enthusiast. He built several experimental gliders, mostly based on Wright designs.

    • ernest archdeacon son1
    • ernest archdeacon son2
    • ernest archdeacon son3
    • ernest archdeacon son4
    • ernest archdeacon son5
  6. Appropriately enough it was Ernest Archdeacon, the man who had done so much to encourage aviation in France since 1903. Henry Farman and Ernest Archdeacon (r), Issy-les-Moulineaux, 1908. download a 750pixel image. also see... Man-made birds take to the sky. http://airsports.fai.org.

  7. Ernest Archdeacon (1863–1950) was a prominent French aviation booster known especially as sponsor of the Archdeacon prize and Deutsch-Archdeacon prize for airplane flight. He was a founding member of both the Automobile Club de France and the Aéro-Club de France. [1] Archdeacon, left, with Alberto Santos-Dumont in 1898.

  1. People also search for