The 1911 Chicago International Aviation Meet (August 12 to August 20, 1911) was major aviation show held at Grant Park in Chicago, Illinois, United States in August 1911.[1][2]
Lincoln Beachey set a world altitude record of 11,642 feet at the meet.[3]
William R. Badger and St. Croix Johnstone[4] both died in aviation accidents at the meet.[5] The wings on Badger's biplane collapsed when he tried to pull out of dive too late, and Johnstone crashed into Lake Michigan after his engine failed.[1]
References
- 1 2 Souter, Gerry (28 June 2010) Guts and Glory: The Last Great Aerial Tournament, Chicago History Journal, Retrieved December 2, 2015
- ↑ The Chicago daily news almanac and year book for 1912, 362–63 (1911)
- ↑ Lynch, Christopher. Chicago's Midway Airport: the first seventy-five years (2002) (ISBN 978-1-893121-18-8)
- ↑ St. Croix Johnstone; EarlyAviators.com Retrieved October 9, 2017
- ↑ "W.R. Badger Crushed by His Engine and St. Croix Johnstone Drowned at Chicago". The New York Times. August 16, 1911. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
Two airmen were killed here on this, the fourth day of the big aviation meet at Grant Park, after three days without a serious accident. The victims were William R. Badger, son of a wealthy Pittsburgh family, and St. Croix Johnstone of Chicago, both young men, and the double tragedy took place in the presence of 500,000 spectators.
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