Louis Blériot (July 1 1872 – August 2 1936) was a French inventor and engineer. He performed the first flight over a large body of water in a heavier-than-air craft.
Birth
Born in
Cambrai, Louis Blériot studied engineering at the
École Centrale Paris. He developed an early interest in aviation and, in
1900, built a motor-powered machine called an
ornithopter, which was intended to fly by flapping its wings. Like other ornithopters before, this experiment failed, but he continued working toward a practical aeroplane.
Blériot-Voisin Company
In
1903, Blériot teamed up with
Gabriel Voisin, another aircraft designer, to form the
Blériot-Voisin Company. The company built a floatplane glider, which flew during
1905. They also developed a biplane powered by an Antoinette motor. The company broke up in
1906 and Blériot began to build and fly aircraft of his own design.
Monoplane
As lightweight engines became available, he developed planes with various configurations ranging from box-kite biplanes to a
canard (tail-first) monoplane. The Blériot V was the world's first successful monoplane. This aeroplane got off the ground in 1907 but soon crashed and was abandoned.
English Channel
A £1000 prize being offered by the London
Daily Mail for the first successful flight across the English Channel interested Blériot and encouraged him to develop his fourth monoplane and first truly successful aircraft, the
Blériot XI. After setting a European endurance record of 36 minutes 55 seconds and winning a cross-country prize, Blériot felt confident about embarking on his cross-Channel trip. On
July 25,
1909 he made the trip from
Calais to
Dover in 37 minutes, delighting the French and worrying the British, who felt that they had suddenly become vulnerable to air attack .
Engineering
Shortly after, Blériot turned his attention to aeronautical design and engineering. He became president of the floundering aircraft company Société pour les Appareils Deperdussin in 1914. He renamed the company
Société Pour l'Aviation et ses Dérivés (SPAD) and turned it into one of France's leading manufacturers of combat aircraft. During
World War I, SPAD built more than 5,600 aircraft for France and exported some to Britain and other countries. He also opened flying schools before World War I in England at
Brooklands and
Hendon Aerodromes as well as a factory in 1917 at Addlestone, near Brooklands, Surrey.
See also
External links
1872 births | 1936 deaths | Aerospace engineers | Aviation pioneers | Aviators | French aviators
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