Barnstorming
Barnstorming: The Wings of Superman Welcome ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We are traveling at a maximum speed, and at an altitude of 28,000 feet. There will be no seatbelts, or brakes, so please sit back and enjoy the flight. Would you pay five bucks a pop to fly with a barnstormer? What is a barnstormer? A barnstormer is someone who performs dangerous stunts with an airplane. These dare-devils were called "flying circuses," (Hanson78) they would fly low to the ground, stood and walked on wings, or dipped and looped in mid-air. Everyday, these barnstormers would put their lives at risk for public applause. Soon, technology stepped in and scientists and inventors came up with new ideas to make the biplane safer. This fact is what really crashed a barnstormer's hopes, No longer would there be that death-defying pilot who flew with the knowledge at the seat of his pants. The commercial air transportation business started off by carrying mail, then cargo, and later passengers. Business boomed after the 1920's and into the 1930's. Controlled airplanes and big money got the best of small time fun. The technology of aviation was a result of barnstorming individualists who put their lives in da
More than 250,000 people in the United States have a license to fly a private airplane. There are seaplanes, which sit on floats and take off and land on water, with the rudders at the back of the airplane. Women wanted rights with being able to vote and they wanted the right to be able to fly an airplane as well. Next the barnstormer would go and show the farmer the chunk of ice, take his money, and laugh all the way home. (Hanson 75) The government required a safety procedure because too many deaths occurred over the years with aviation during the 1920's and 1930's. As children they knew they wanted to fly when their father, Bishop Wright, brought home one day a toy helicopter one day. Even though Colonel Billy Mitchell was the first to fly around the world in 1924. (Woodworth 1) These were the people who would bring in the passengers like a herd of cattle, but people were skeptical and afraid to fly, so it was not easy. Men like Charles Lindbergh, who flew from New York to Le Bourget Field in France, was the first to cross the Atlantic by plane in a matter of 33:1/2 hours. If a person was to buy a ticket to Space in five to ten years, the price will be twelve thousand dollars. By 1914, airplanes became a more valuable source for the military in World War I, when it ended; the U. He sketched birds and heavier-than-air flying machines, but his vision remained a dream. He would be scattered with new inventions, and wrote down ideas off the top of his head on a scrap piece of paper. In 1925, the Air Mail Act was passed making the carriage of mail by air a private operation under a system of competitive bidding.
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