Part 1
By Ernesto B. Ferreras Jr.
Curtiss Model D (Curtiss
Pusher) Biplane By uploaded by Colputt at
en.wikipedia - Transferred from en.wikipedia by SreeBot, Public Domain https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16806541 |
A biplane named the Honolulu Skylark was
the first aircraft to conquer the Philippine sky in the afternoon of February
21, 1911. American barnstormer James C. ‘Bud’ Mars took off in the biplane and
climbed to a height of 1,000 feet above the carnival grounds at the Luneta.
By J. Ellsworth Gross (1862-1933) -
https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/images/h91000/h91002c.htm,
Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=79074413 |
Another biplane called the Red Devil
piloted by its builder, Capt. Thomas Baldwin, flew over Manila six days later.
The Filipino people witnessed a historic event, the kind of which has continued
to thrill us ever since.
By Cliff - Flickr: Baldwin Red Devil, CC BY 2.0,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=25697464 |
Mars and Baldwin were barnstormers who
performed in exhibitions to demonstrate the new “science of flight” that was
started by the Wright Brothers eight years earlier. The Skylark was a Curtiss
pusher biplane that had its engine and propeller located at the rear.
In 1914, another American named Tom Gunn,
a Chinese-American aviation pioneer dubbed as the ‘Wright of China,’ displayed
the same type of aircraft in Manila.