1926 in aviation
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Template:Yearbox Template:Portal This is a list of aviation-related events from 1926:
Events
- Award of the Harmon Trophy begins. A set of three trophies is awarded annually to the worldTemplate:'s outstanding aviator, aviatrix (female aviator), and aeronaut (balloon or dirigible aviator) for the year, and a fourth trophy (the National Trophy) is awarded to the outstanding aviator for the year in each of the 21 member countries of the International League of Aviators.
- Fiat acquires the Società Anonima Aeronautica Ansaldo aircraft manufacturing subsidiary from the Gio. Ansaldo & C. shipbuilding company and combines it with its own Società Italiana Aviazione subsidiary to form a new Società Anonima Aeronautica d'Italia subsidiary for the design and production of aircraft.<ref>Chant, Chris, The WorldTemplate:'s Great Bombers, New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 2000, Template:ISBN, p. 48.</ref>
- The first known reforestation of land by aircraft is carried by airplanes operating from Wheeler Field on Oahu in the Territory of Hawaii.<ref name="hawaii1920">Aviation Hawaii: 1920-1929 Chronology of Aviation in Hawaii</ref>
- Harold Frederick Pitcairn founds the Pitcairn Aircraft Company. It later will become the Autogiro Company of America.
- Summer 1926 – A Lieutenant Jira of Czechoslovakia flies Avia B.9.11 L-BONG Template:Convert from Prague to Paris and back at an average speed of Template:Convert, a notable achievement at the time for an aircraft of the B.9Template:'s class.<ref>Donald, David, ed., The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft, New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 72.</ref>
January
- January 6 – Deutsche Luft Hansa is formed by the merger of Deutscher Aero Lloyd and Junkers Luftverkehr.
- January 22 – A Spanish four-man crew led by Spanish Air Force Major Ramón Franco – the brother of future Spanish dictator Francisco Franco – and including Captain Julio Ruiz de Alda Miqueleiz takes off from the Rio Tinto at Palos de Moguer, Spain, to begin a seven-stop flight to Buenos Aires in the Dornier Do J Wal ("Whale") flying boat Plus Ultra ("Farther Still"). After flying low past the Christopher Columbus Monument in Huelva, Spain, they make an uneventful 806-mile (1,298-km) flight to their first stop at Las Palmas in the Canary Islands.<ref>O'Connor, Derek, "The Other Franco," Aviation History, January 2018, pp. 56, 57.</ref>
- January 26 – Ramón Franco and his crew complete the second leg of their Spain-to-Buenos Aires flight, flying Template:Convert from Las Palmas in the Canary Islands to Porto Praia in the Cape Verde Islands in 9 hours 50 minutes.<ref name=oconnor57Jan2018>O'Connor, Derek, "The Other Franco," Aviation History, January 2018, p. 57.</ref>
- January 30 – Ramón Franco and his crew complete the third and longest leg of their Spain-to-Buenos Aires flight, flying Template:Convert from Barrera de Inferno in the Cape Verde Islands to Fernando de Noronha in 12 hours at an altitude of Template:Convert. It is the second-longest nonstop flight in history – exceeded only by a 1,890-mile North Atlantic Ocean crossing in a Vickers Vimy on 14-15 June 1919 by John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown – and they become the first aviators to cross the South Atlantic Ocean using only one aircraft. Rough weather forces them to spend the night on their flying boat Plus Ultra before they can dock at Fernando de Noronha.<ref name=oconnor57Jan2018/>
- January 31 – Forced to throw their gear and luggage overboard to remain airborne after an in-flight engine failure, Ramón Franco and his crew complete the fourth leg of their Spain-to-Buenos Aires flight, flying Template:Convert from Fernando de Noronha to Recife, Brazil, where they receive a hero's welcome.<ref>O'Connor, Derek, "The Other Franco," Aviation History, January 2018, pp. 57-58.</ref>
February
- February 4 – Spanish Air Force Major Ramón Franco, copilot/navigator Captain Julio Ruiz de Alda Miqueleiz, and their crew complete the fifth leg of their Spain–to–Buenos Aires flight in the Dornier Do J Wal ("Whale") flying boat Plus Ultra ("Farther Still"), flying Template:Convert from Recife, Brazil to Rio de Janeiro in 12 hours 16 minutes. Franco is at the controls for the entire flight. So many boats meet them that they have difficulty landing in Guanabara Bay without colliding with one.<ref name=oconnor58jan2018>O'Connor, Derek, "The Other Franco," Aviation History, January 2018, p. 58.</ref>
- February 9 – Ramón Franco and his crew complete the sixth leg of their Spain-to-Buenos Aires flight, flying Template:Convert from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Montevideo, Uruguay, in 12 hours 5 minutes.<ref name=oconnor58jan2018/>
- February 10 – Ramón Franco and his crew complete their Spain-to-Buenos Aires flight, flying the journey's seventh leg, a Template:Convert flight from Montevideo, Uruguay, to Buenos Aires where they receive another welcome by exuberant crowds. Over 20 days, they have completed the 6,300-mile (10,145-km) trip from Spain in just under 51 hours of flying time, a considerable achievement for the time. Franco's plans to fly back to Spain in Plus Ultra via Chile, Mexico, Cuba, and the Azores will be cancelled when the Government of Spain opts to present the plane to the Government of Argentina as a gift. Plus UltraTemplate:'s crew instead will return to Spain aboard the Argentine Navy protected cruiser Buenos Aires as Spanish national heroes.<ref name=oconnor58jan2018/>
- February 12 – Straying Template:Convert off course while flying a Curtiss Carrier Pigeon for the United States Post Office on the overnight airmail delivery route from Chicago to New York City, pioneering American pilot Art Smith dies when he crashes into a grove of trees near Montpelier, Ohio.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He is the second U.S. overnight mail service pilot to die on duty.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
March
- March 1 – Four Royal Air Force Fairey IIIDs begin a long-distance flight, taking them from Cairo to Cape Town and then on to Lee-on-Solent, England, where they will arrive on June 2.<ref>Taylor 1988, p.102–103.</ref>
- March 16 – Robert Goddard launches the first liquid-fuelled rocket near Auburn, Massachusetts.
- March 24 – The Cierva Autogiro Company is founded in the United Kingdom.
April
- April 1 – The Italian airline Società Italiana Servizi Aerei begins operations linking Trieste, Venice, Pavia, and Turin with CANT 10 flying boats.
- April 6 – Varney Speed Lines begins operations in the U.S. It will later become Continental Airlines.
- April 7 – The Italian airline Società Anonima Navigazione Aerea (SANA) begins fight operations, offering flying boat service on the Genoa–Rome–Naples–Palermo route.
- April 10 – Three United States Army Air Service aircraft take photographs of an eruption of Mauna Loa volcano on the island of Hawaii, providing valuable scientific information.<ref name="hawaii1920"/>
- April 17 – Western Air Express (the future Western Airlines) begins operations with a contract mail flight from Salt Lake City, Utah, to Los Angeles, using a Douglas M-2. The airline will begin passenger services a month later.
- April 30 – Bessie Coleman, the first licensed African-American female pilot, is killed along with mechanic William Wills, who was piloting the plane, after they crash as a result of a wrench that Wills accidentally left loose getting stuck in the control gears.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
May
- May 1 – Deutsche Luft Hansa begins the first night passenger airline service, with domestic flights in Germany between Berlin and Königsberg employing Junkers G 24 aircraft.<ref name="junkers">German Aviation History Homepage: Junkers G 24 Template:Webarchive</ref>
- May 4 – The Stinson Aircraft Corporation is incorporated.
- May 6 – Flying a Blackburn Dart, Flight Lieutenant Gerald Boyce makes the first night deck landing in history, landing aboard the British aircraft carrier Template:HMS off the south coast of England.<ref>Sturtivant, Ray, British Naval Aviation: The Fleet Air Arm, 1917-1990, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1990, Template:ISBN, p. 215.</ref>
- May 9 – Richard Byrd and Floyd Bennett make the first flight over the North Pole in a Fokker VIIa-3m.
- May 11–14 - Roald Amundsen makes the first airship flight over the North Pole. The Norge leaves Spitzbergen and arrives in Teller, Alaska, three days later.
- May 20 – The Air Commerce Act becomes law in the United States. It creates an Aeronautics Branch within the United States Department of Commerce, vesting that entity with regulatory powers to ensure civil air safety, including testing and licensing pilots, issuing certificates to guarantee the airworthiness of aircraft, making and enforcing safety rules, certifying aircraft, establishing airways, operating and maintaining aids to air navigation, and investigating accidents and incidents in aviation.Template:Citation needed It also directs that airways in the United States be charted for the first time, and assigns the responsibility to chart them to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.<ref>noaa.gov NOAA History: NOAA Legacy Timeline 1900-1969</ref>
- May 24 – The U.S. National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) holds its first annual manufacturers' conference, which takes place at Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory at Langley Field, Virginia, as a modest, one-day event with 46 attendees. By 1936, it will grow into a two-day event with more than 300 attendees each day.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
June
- June 20 – The United States Coast Guard opens the first permanent Coast Guard Air Stations.<ref>A Chronological History of Coast Guard Aviation: The Early Years, 1915-1938.</ref><ref>Coast Guard Aviation History.</ref>
- June 26 – Flying a Potez 28, Ludovic Arrachart and his brother Paul depart Paris. By the time a broken fuel pipe forces them to land at RAF Shaibah near Basra, Iraq, 26 hours 30 minutes later, they will have set a new world aviation nonstop distance record of Template:Convert.
- June 30 – Alan Cobham sets out on a round trip from England to Australia in a de Havilland DH.50. He will arrive back in London on October 1 and receive a knighthood for his accomplishment.
July
- July 2
- The United States Army Air Service becomes the United States Army Air Corps.
- In accordance with the redesignation of its parent service, the Air Service Tactical School at Langley Field in Virginia is renamed the Air Corps Tactical School.
- July 24 – Two Deutsche Luft Hansa Junkers G.24s leave Berlin to make a round-trip to Beijing. They will return on September 26.<ref name="junkers"/>
- July 26 – During United States Navy experiments with the operation of seaplanes from a submarine equipped with an aircraft hangar, the submarine Template:USS carries out for the first time a full cycle of surfacing, removing the disassembled seaplane from its hangar, assembling it, launching it, retrieving it, disassembling it, stowing in its hangar, and submerging, on the Thames River at New London, Connecticut.
August
- August 18 – Flying in bad weather on a scheduled passenger flight from Paris-Le Bourget Airport outside Paris to Croydon Airport in London with 15 people aboard, the Air Union Blériot 155 F-AIEB Wilbur Wright strikes the roof of a barn and crashes into haystacks near Hurst, Kent, south of Lympne Airport, killing its two crew members and two of its 13 passengers.<ref name=AB>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Aviation Safety Network: Accident Description</ref>
September
- September 10–17 – The Daily Mail sponsors the third and final light airplane trials at Lympne Aerodrome in Lympne, England. A Hawker Cygnet flown by George Bulman wins. Flying an Avro 581 Avian, Bert Hinkler takes second place in three of the six trials before withdrawing with magneto problems.<ref name="Donald, David 1997, p. 78">Donald, David, ed., The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft, New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 78.</ref>
- September 21 – Hoping to win the Orteig Prize, French World War I ace René Fonck attempts to take off from Roosevelt Field on Long Island in a severely overloaded Sikorsky S-35 for a nonstop transatlantic flight to Paris. The aircraft loses a wheel on takeoff, fails to gain lift, cartwheels off a bluff, and bursts into flames, killing two of its crew. Fonck survives.
- September 26 – The French aviators Dieudonné Costes and René de Vitrolles fly Template:Convert from Paris to Assuan, Egypt, in an attempt to break the world distance record.
October
- October 2 – During a scheduled passenger flight from Paris-Le Bourget Airport outside Paris to Croydon Airport in London, the Air Union Blériot 155 F-AICQ Clément Ader experiences an in-flight engine fire and attempts an emergency landing at Leigh, Kent. It crashes and is consumed by fire, killing all seven people on board.<ref>Aviation Safety Network: Accident Description</ref>
- October 21 – The British airship R.33 makes further parasite fighter tests, releasing two Gloster Grebes from Template:Convert.
- October 22 – Curtiss F6C Hawk fighters of the United States NavyTemplate:'s Fighter Squadron 2 (VF-2) surprise U.S. Navy capital ships sortieing from San Pedro Harbor in California with a simulated dive-bombing attack, diving almost vertically from Template:Convert. It generally is considered the birth of modern dive bombing.<ref>Peattie, Mark R., Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power 1909-1941, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 2001, Template:ISBN, p. 39.</ref><ref>Smith, Peter C., Dive Bomber!, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1982, Template:ISBN, pp. 23-24.</ref>
- October 28 – The French aviators Dieudonné Costes and J. Rignot break the world distance record, flying Template:Convert from Paris to Jask, Persia, as a part of Template:Convert Paris–India–Paris flight.
November
- November 6 – Italo Balbo becomes Italy's Secretary of State for Air.<ref>Gooch, John, Mussolini and His Generals: The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy, 1922-1940, Cambridge, U.K: Cambridge University Press, 2007, Template:ISBN, p. 75.</ref>
- November 13 – The 1926 Schneider Trophy race is flown at Hampton Roads, Virginia. Mario de Bernardi of Italy wins in a Macchi M.39 at Template:Convert, a new world speed record.
- November 15 – T. Neville Stack and B. S. Leete leave England in an attempt to reach India by air in a de Havilland DH.60. They will arrive in Karachi on January 8, 1927.
- November 17 – Mario de Bernardi breaks his four-day-old world speed record, reaching Template:Convert in the same Macchi M.39 at Hampton Roads, Virginia, USA.
December
- December 15 – Bert Hinkler and John F. Leeming, flying the Avro 585 Gosport biplane G-EBPH, take off from Woodford Aerodrome in Woodford, Greater Manchester, England, hoping to land on the mountain Helvellyn in the Lake District, but turn back because of bad weather.<ref name=yorkshireaccidents>Template:Cite web</ref>
- December 21 – Hinkler and Leeming depart Woodford Aerodrome in the Avro 585 Gosport biplane G-EBPH to make a second attempt at landing on Helvellyn, but turn back after finding the winds over the Lake District too strong to allow a landing.<ref name=yorkshireaccidents/>
- December 22 – Flying the Avro 585 Gosport biplane G-EBPH from Woodford Aerodrome, Hinkler (as passenger) and Leeming (as pilot) succeed in landing on the summit of Helvellyn. After asking a witness on the ground to sign a paper attesting to the landing, they take off and return to Woodford Aerodrome. They claim to have made the first landing on a mountain in the United Kingdom.<ref name=yorkshireaccidents/>
First flights
- Avro 571 Buffalo
- Boulton Paul Sidestrand
- Cierva C.8
- Dewoitine D.25
- Fairchild 71
- Farman F.150
- Junkers A 32
- Junkers A 35
- Junkers G 31
- Latécoère 26
- Levasseur PL.4
- Pitcairn PA-2 Sesquiwing
- Pitcairn PA-3 Orowing
- Potez 28
- Westland Westbury
- Wright-Bellanca WB-2
- c. 1926 – Mitsubishi 2MB1
- Spring 1926 – Westland Racer
January
- January 12 – Polikarpov DI-1
- January 25 – Stinson Detroiter
February
- Latécoère 25
- February 19 – Dornier N/Kawasaki Ka 87
March
- Armstrong Whitworth Argosy G-EBLF<ref>Donald, David, ed., The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft, New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 63.</ref>
April
- April 24 - Handley Page Harrow (HP.31)
May
- May 5 – Wright XF3W Apache<ref>Angelucci, Enzo, The American Fighter: The Definitive Guide to American Fighter Aircraft From 1917 to the Present, New York: Orion Books, 1987, Template:ISBN, p. 462.</ref>
- May 7 – Blériot 127
June
- ca. June – Saunders A.3 Valkyrie
- June 11 – Ford 4-AT Trimotor<ref>Polmar, Norman, "'There's a Ford In Your Future'," Naval History, December 2015, p. 14.</ref>
- June 14 – Fairchild FC-1, prototype of the Fairchild FC-2
- June 17 – Junkers W 33
- June 19 – Blackburn Iris
- June 26
July
- Latécoère 21
- Martin T3M
- July 6 – Macchi M.39
August
- August 9 – Focke-Wulf GL 18
September
- Avro 581, prototype of the Avro Avian<ref name="Donald, David 1997, p. 78"/>
- De Havilland DH.66 Hercules G-EBMW
October
- October 25 - Spartan C3
- October 27 - Blériot 165
November
- Saunders A.4 Medina G-EBMG
- November 3 – Boeing XF2B-1, prototype of the Boeing F2B<ref>Angelucci, Enzo, The American Fighter: The Definitive Guide to American Fighter Aircraft From 1917 to the Present, New York: Orion Books, 1987, p. 74.</ref>
Entered service
- Levasseur PL.2 with French Naval Aviation aboard the aircraft carrier Béarn
May
June
- Breguet 19 B.2 bomber variant with the 11e Régiment d'Aviation de Bombardement of the French ArmyTemplate:'s Aéronautique Militaire<ref>Donald, David, ed., The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft, New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 187.</ref>
- June 16 – Armstrong Whitworth Argosy G-EBLO with Imperial Airways<ref>Donald, David, ed., The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft, New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 63.</ref>
August
September
- Martin T3M with the United States Navy
December
Retirements
- Cox-Klemin XS by the United States Navy
- Grigorovich M-24 by Soviet Naval Aviation
- Martin MS by the United States Navy
March
References
- Taylor, H.A. Fairey Aircraft since 1915. London:Putnam, 1988. Template:ISBN.