“ONE OF THE PREMIER JOURNALS OF THE EARLY HISTORY OF AVIATION”: 1910 VOLUME OF L’AÉROPHILE, IN SEPARATE ISSUES
BESANÇON, Georges, editor. L’Aérophile, whole Volume 18. Paris: Aux Bureaux de “L’Aérophile,” January 1-December 15, 1910. 24 separate issues. Tall, slim octavo, original illustrated wrappers. Housed in custom clamshell box.
Original photographically illustrated issues of L’Aérophile for 1910, reporting such significant events as speed and altitude records, the first commercial flight, and the recent military aeronautical accomplishments of the United States, Germany and Japan.
“In January 1893 the French journalist and balloonist Georges Besançon began publishing a monthly illustrated revue, L’Aérophile (1893-1947). Quickly, L’Aérophile became one of the premier journals of the early history of aviation… In later years, as artificial wings, gliders, man- and engine-powered planes were developed, the magazine brought their stories to the public” (Library of Congress). The volume for 1910 reports such record-setting events as the tests of Clément Ader’s 1897 controlled flight in Avion III, Glenn Curtiss’ record speed of 52 mph, Hubert Latham’s climb to 3,281 feet, Raymonde de Laroche’s becoming the first woman to receive a pilot’s licence, Léon Morane’s new speed record of 65.8 mph, Peruvian Geo Chavez’s flight over the Alps reaching a height of 7,218 feet, the Wright Brothers’ first flight for the purpose of delivering commercial freight, the world’s first use of a radio between aircraft and ground, the first dropping of missiles from an airplane by the United States, notice of a patent taken out in Germany for a device that allows a fixed machine gun to be fired from an airplane, Army Captain Yoshitoshi Tokugawa’s first heavier-than-air flight in Japan, and the founding of the Curtiss Aeroplane Company. Text in French. Rubber stamps of the War Department Library, occasional marginal annotation.
Issues disbound, but all except two with wrappers intact, some pencil marks to covers, light embrowning to advertisement pages. A splendid set in near-fine condition.