![]() | ||||
![]() | ||||
![]() | ||||
Palm Springs Air Museum, Palm Springs, CA (5/11/2002) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
1 March 1911 (UK): The first four Royal Navy pilots, Lieutenants Charles R. Samson, R. Gregory, and Arthur M. Longmore of the Royal Navy and Lieutenant E. L. Gerrard of the Royal Marine Light Infantry, report for flight training at Eastchurch airfield, using borrowed Short S.27 aircraft. 1 March 1912 (USA): Capt. Albert Berry makes the first parachute descent from a powered airplane in America when he jumps from a Benoist aircraft that is being flown by the company pilot, Anthony Jannus. The aircraft is flying at a height of 1,500 ft. over Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis, Missouri, and Berry uses a static line parachute. 1 March 1919 (UK/Germany): An airmail service begins Folkestone and Cologne using an Airco DH.9 biplane. 1 March 1919 (Germany): German airline Deutsche Luft-Reederei (DLR) begins scheduled flights to Hamburg. 1 March 1923 (USA): Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company delivers to Army Air Service TC-1, largest American non-rigid dirigible. 1 March 1923 (USA): Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, Assistant Chief of Air Service, completes 5000 mile inspection trip by airplane. 1 March 1924 (USA): Deke Slayton, American astronaut, was born (d. 1993). was one of the original “Mercury Seven” NASA astronauts. Initially grounded by a heart condition, he would serve as NASA’s Director of Flight Crew Operations. Deke Slayton was responsible for all crew assignments at NASA from November 1963 until March 1972, when he was granted medical clearance to fly as docking module pilot of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. At the time of the flight, he became the oldest person to fly into space. 1 March 1925 (USA): Flying a Standard J-1, Ryan Airlines begins the first regularly scheduled passenger airline service flown within the mainland United States. The service runs between Los Angeles and San Diego. 1 March 1926 (Egypt/South Africa/England): Four Royal Air Force Fairey IIID’s 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. 1 March 1928 (France/Chile): An airmail route between France and Chile is opened with a fast sea link between Dakar, Senegal and Natal, Brazil. 1 March 1928 (UK): The British aircraft carrier HMS Courgaeous enters service as the world’s first aircraft carrier with transverse arresting gear. 1 March 1932 (USA): Entered Service: Berliner-Joyce P-16 with United States Army Air Corps. 1 March 1932 (USA): The 20-months-old son of aviator Charles Lindbergh has been kidnapped from the family’s home in Hopewell, New Jersey. 1 March 1933 (USA): U. S. Air Commerce Regulations are amended to increase the flying time required for a pilot’s license from 10 hours to 50 hours. 1 March 1938 (USA): The 1938 Yosemite TWA crash; a Douglas DC-2, disappears on a flight from San Francisco to Winslow, Arizona; the aircraft is found three months later on a mountain in Yosemite National Park; all 9 on board die. 1 March 1938 (Canada): Western Air Command with Headquarters at Vancouver, BC, was formed to control all RCAF units in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. 1 March 1939 (Canada): Clarence Decatur C. D. Howe opened the first TransCanada Air Lines transcontinental passenger service from Montreal to Vancouver. 1 March 1941 (New Zealand): New Zealand’s first fighter squadron, No. 485 Squadron RNZAF is formed. 1 March 1941 (England): No. 402 Squadron became operational at Digby, Lincolnshire, England. 1 March 1941 (England): No. 403 (Fighter) Squadron was formed at Bagington, England. 1 March 1941 (England): To avoid confusion with RAF units, RCAF squadrons overseas were renumbered 400 series i. e. 110 became 400 Squadron, No. 1 Squadron became 401 Squadron, etc. 1 March 1942 (Canada): Formation of RCAF Accident Board. 1 March 1942 (Newfoundland): The U. S. Navy sinks a German submarine for the first time in World War II when a Patrol Squadron 82 (VP-82) Lockheed PBO-1 Hudson piloted by Ensign William Tepuni USNR sinks the German submarine U-656 off Cape Race, Newfoundland. 1 March 1943 (France): Overnight, Royal Air Force Bomber Command flies the last raid of its early 1943 campaign against German submarines and their bases in France. It has attacked Lorient nine times and Brest once since the start of the campaign on January 14, but found German submarine pens impervious to its bombs. The raids have caused much damage to the French cities and their residents. 1 March 1943 (Germany): Since January 14, Royal Air Force Bomber Command has launched major raids on Wilhelmshaven four times, Berlin, Cologne, and Hamburg three times each, and Bremen, Düsseldorf, and Nuremberg once each, as well as on Milan and Turin. 1 March 1945 (South Pacific): Carrier aircraft of U. S. Navy Task Force 58 strike Okinawa and conduct photographic reconnaissance flights over Okinawa, Kerama Retto, Minami Daito, and Amami O Shima. 1 March 1945 (Germany): First vertical take-off manned rocket flight test, launched from the Lager Heuberg military training area near Stetten am kalten Markt, of Bachem Ba.349 Natter, ’M23’, a vertically launched bomber interceptor, fails when Oberleutnant Lothar Sieber, 22, a volunteer, is killed as rocket-powered aircraft reaches ~1,650 feet, cockpit canopy detaches, the Ba.349 noses over onto back, then falls from ~4,800 feet, killing pilot. No cause for crash determined but it was thought that improperly latched canopy may have knocked Siebert unconscious. Three successful manned flights subsequently flown and a group of the fighters readied for intercept mission, but advancing U.S. 8th Army armored units overrun launch site before Natters can be used. 1 March 1945 (USA): Two Bell P-59A Airacomets of the 29th Fighter Squadron collide in mid-air over the Grey Butte Army Airfield during an anti-aircraft tracking exercise. 2nd Lt. Robert W. Murdock (pilot of AF 44-22620), and 2nd Lt. Howard L. Wilson (pilot of AF 44-22626) are killed in the collision.
1 March 1946 (USA): Two Silverplate Boeing 1 March 1946 (USA): General Carl Spaatz is designated Commander USAAF. 1 March 1948 (USA): First flight of the Curtiss-Wright XF-87 Blackhawk, the last Curtiss-designed aircraft. 1 March 1949 (USA): North American’s B-45 Tornado bomber sets an unofficial speed record of 675 miles per hour. 1 March 1951 (Canada): No. 441 Squadron was reformed at St. Hubert, Quebec, and equipped with de Havilland DH.100 Vampire fighters. 1 March 1956 (Canada): The International Air Transport Association finalizes a draft of the Radiotelephony spelling alphabet for the International Civil Aviation Organization. 1 March 1957 (France): SNCASE (or Sud-Est) and SNCASO (or Sud-Ouest) merge to form Sud Aviation. 1 March 1962 (USA): American Airlines Flight 1, a Boeing 707, crashes in Jamaica Bay, Queens, New York due to a rudder malfunction, killing all 95 passengers and crew on board. 1 March 1962 (USA): Fourth Lockheed U-2A, Article 344, AF 56-6677, delivered to the CIA on 20 November 1955, converted to U-2F by October 1961, crashes near Edwards Air Force Base, California, during aerial refueling training, killing SAC pilot Capt. John Campbell. Airframe entered jetwash behind the Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker, and broke up. 1 March 1962 (USA): Los Angeles Airways sets up the world’s first commercial service using turbine-powered, multi-engine helicopters, the Sikorsky S-61L, which could accommodate up to 28 passengers. 1 March 1965 (Vietnam): The combat debut of the Republic F-105 Thunderchief takes place, as U. S. Air Force Republic F-105D Thunderchief aircraft based at Da Nang, South Vietnam, begin bombing missions over North Vietnam. 1 March 1966 (Venus): Venera 3 Soviet space probe crashes on Venus becoming the first spacecraft to land on another planet’s surface. 1 March 1969 (South Vietnam): The U. S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile) begins Operation Massachusetts Striker, a helicopter-borne assault against North Vietnamese forces in South Vietnam’s A Shau Valley. It will continue until May 8 1 March 1976 (USA): Lt. Col. Michael A. Love, 37, chief USAF test pilot on the Martin-Marietta X-24B program, is killed in the crash of an McDonnell Douglas F-4C Phantom II on a dry lakebed at Edwards AFB, California, after take-off on a proficiency flight when his ejection seat malfunctions. Navigator Maj. E. B. Underwood, Jr. ejects before the crash and is hospitalized in stable condition. After serving in the lifting body program as chase pilot on various Northrop M2-F2, M2-F3 and X-24A flights, Love made his first X-24B flight on 4 October 1973, and piloted the plane to its fastest speed-better than 1,860 kph-before terminating the program with a hard-surface runway landing at Edwards on 20 August 1975. 1 March 1989 (Canada): Canadian Space Agency (CSA) was formed, taking over the National Research Council as Canada’s primary space agency. In 1993, the CSA established its headquarters in St. Hubert, Quebec. 1-20 March 1999 (Global Flight): The hot-air balloon Breitling Orbiter 3, with pilots Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones, begins the first non-stop, round-the-world balloon flight. They will complete the flight on March 19, setting a new distance record for any type of aircraft of 40,804 km (25,360 miles). Taking a total time of 19 days, 21 hours and 47 min. 1 March 2002 (USA): Launch of Space Shuttle Columbia STS-109 at 11:22:02 UTC. Mission highlights: Hubble Space Telescope servicing, last successful mission for Columbia before STS-107. 1 March 2007 (Iraq): A Bell OH-58D Kiowa makes a hard landing south of Kirkuk, injuring both crewmembers, and becomes entangled in overhanging wires before hitting the ground. Reports had varied whether the crash was due to a mechanical or electronic failure and whether it is shot down. 1 March 2010 (Afghanistan): ACT Airlines Airbus A300B4-200 (TC-ACB) sustained substantial damage when the port undercarriage collapsed on landing at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. The port engine and wing were also damaged. 1 March 2010 (Tanzania): Air Tanzania Flight 100, operated by Boeing 737-200 (5H-MVZ) sustained substantial damage when it departed the runway on landing at Mwanza Airport and the nosewheel collapsed. Damage was also caused to an engine. |
||||
** The Skytamer Ready Room (Guestbook) ** | ||||
![]() |