The Magnificent Moisants: Champions of Early Flight
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About this book
Between the first Kitty Hawk flight and World War I a small group of flyers risked their lives and fortunes to convince a skeptical public that the airplane was destined to become safe practical and commonplace. Among the most flamboyant of aviations pioneers were Alfred John and Matilde Moisant a family of fervent believers in aviation who built and tested planes ran a flight school set and broke records and staged air exhibitions seen by thousands in the United States Cuba and Mexico. Famed for their bravado and charm the Moisant siblings ardently promoted the cause of commercial aviation predicting transatlantic crossings scheduled flights between cities and air deliveries of mail decades before the fact. Explaining how the Moisants contributed to the transformation of flight from sport into a business Doris L. Rich charts the rise of their popular air circus and chronicles the tumultuous careers of the flyers-including future World War I ace Roland Garros and Americas first licensed woman pilot Harriet Quimby. Captivated by the possibilities of aviation Alfred Moisant used the fortune he had amassed from his sugar plantation in El Salvador to finance ambitious demonstration tours promoting his planes. John Moisant set three worlds records in a flight from Paris to London in 1910 and further enhanced his reputation with a series of exploits that culminated in a tragic fatal crash only five months after he had learned to fly. Matilde Moisant the second American woman to earn a pilots license broke an altitude record in 1911 and performed stunts that rivaled her brothers in daredevilry. Drawing on family interviews and records buried in the National Archives Rich details the Moisants forays into Central American political intrigue and their adventures in the air.
