In between visitors to the Bullis Room’s open house last
Saturday, we pulled this book off the
shelves for a quick scan-through:
Flying Machines:
Construction and Operation. A Practical Book Which Shows, In Illustrations,
Working Plans and Text, How To Build and Navigate The Modern Airship.
Since this book was published in 1910, radical changes and advances have
occurred in this field (to say the least). And so we were interested and amused by
some of the comments of authors William James Jackman and Thomas H. Russell.
For example, under the title “Limits of the Flying Machine,” they write:
In the
opinion of the competent experts it is idle to look for a
commercial
future for the flying machine. There is, and always
will be, a
limit to its carrying capacity, which will prohibit its
employment
for passenger or freight purposes in a wholesale
or general
way.
However, they do acknowledge some practical uses for this
invention in the fields of:
Sports –
flying machine races
Science - exploration of otherwise inaccessible regions such as
deserts, mountain
tops
War – reconnoitering in time of war to spy out the enemy’s encampment
and
ascertain its defenses
This book’s quaint illustrations showing basic principles of
flight and early flying machines make it a fun look-through. We recommend you
stop by the Bullis Room sometime and let us show it to you.
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