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  1. Around the age of sixty, Octave Chanute directed his focus towards the goal of flying and designed many different gliders. He declined to patent any of his designs, and he actively collaborated with other experimenters.

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  2. spicerweb.org › chanute › cha_indexChanute Main Page

    Octave Chanute - this Chicago engineer was the 'elder statesman' of aeronautical experiments in 1900. His glider experiments at Miller Beach in 1896 produced the most influential and significant glider of the pre-Wright era. These pages contain a comprehensive description of Octave Chanute's experiments along the south end of Lake Michigan ...

  3. Octave Chanute's flying biplane glider, also known as the Chanute-Herring glider - 1896. Both Herring and Chanute contributed to the design of this aircraft. Each 16-foot (4.9-meter) wing was covered with varnished silk. The pilot hung from two bars that ran down from the upper wings and passed under his arms.

  4. May 18, 2018 · Octave Chanute and the Symphony of Flight. With its pilot—probably August Herring—clinging to its underwing, a Chanute biplane glider skirts the side of a sand dune on Lake Michigan’s shore in the summer of 1896. (Library of Congress) Octave Chanute conducted from behind the scenes. The letter, dated May 13, 1900, was astonishing in its ...

  5. Octave Chanute 1999 about (1832-1910) Early Pioneer; Glider Designer. Bio. Octave Chanute was possibly the first person to publicly promote the sport of gliding and soaring in the United States of America. In September 1896 a Chicago Tribune reporter quoted him as saying, "... With the high wind the practice was full of excitement for beholders.

  6. Octave Chanute arrived at Miller Beach, Gary, Indiana, on June 22, 1896, to perform gliding flight experiments in the Dunes just west of this site. Over 700 successful flights provided him with significant aerodynamic data. Chanute willingly shared his data enabling the Wright Brothers and other pioneers to develop powered flying machines. This marker is dedicated to Chanute and his assistants ...

  7. Caption: Octave Chanute holds his biwing glider design on top of a dune. At sixty-four years of age, Octave left the experimental "glides" to his younger companions. Photograph from Calumet Regional Archives, IU Northwest.

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