History
of the Bleriot XI
The
Blériot Type Xl was the most famous
and successful of several classic airplanes
that emerged during the miraculous summer
of 1909, when all of Europe seemed to
be taking to the sky.
Louis Blériot, a French engineer
and manufacturer of automobile head lamps,
had first become interested in aeronautics
in 1901-2, when he constructed an experimental
ornithopter. During the next eight years
he moved through a series of ten distinct
aircraft designs, only one of which was
capable of making a flight of more than
ten minutes. His next effort, the Type
Xl, primarily designed by engineer Raymond
Saulnier, was first flown at Issy-les-Moulineaux
on January 23, 1909.
During this time, Lord Alfred Northcliffe,
owner of the Daily Mail Newspaper in London
England, ovffered a prize of 1,000 English
Pounds to the first person who would fly
across the English Channel. Bleriot achieved
immortality on July 25, 1909, when he
became the first person ever to fly across
the channel, covering the 40 kilometers
(32 miles) between Calais Fance and Dover
England in 36 minutes, 30 seconds.
In the wake of the Channel flight, Blériot
received the first of many orders for
the Type Xl monoplane. Variants of the
original 1909 machine, produced by the
Blériot firm, foreign licensees,
and enthusiastic amateur builders in Europe
and America, were a dominant force in
aeronautics before World War I.
Our Bleriot Type XI was produced later
on and flew on the West Coast. It was
restored in the early 1980's with an 80
hp Continental engine in place of the
rare Anzani engine. The Bleriot enjoys
only brief hops through the year as its
speed and range prevent it from venturing
far from its home base.
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