Louis Blériot

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Louis Blériot
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Louis Blériot
Wreckage of Blériot's plane, Reims Air Meet, August 1909.
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Wreckage of Blériot's plane, Reims Air Meet, August 1909.

Louis Blériot (July 1, 1872August 2, 1936) was a French inventor and engineer. He performed the first flight over a large body of water in a heavier-than-air craft.

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[edit] Early years

Born in Cambrai, Louis Blériot studied engineering at the École Centrale Paris. His interest in aviation manifested itself when, in 1900, he built an ornithopter, a type of early aircraft designed to use wing-flapping to achieve flight.

Blériot and collaborator Gabriel Voisin formed the Blériot-Voisin Company. Active between 1903 and 1906, the company developed several aircraft designs.

[edit] The Channel and beyond

After years of honing his piloting skills, Blériot decided to go after the coveted thousand-pound prize offered by the London Daily Mail for a successful crossing of the English Channel. On July 25, 1909 he flew the twenty-two statute miles (35 km) from Les Barraques (near Calais) to Dover in his Blériot XI. The trip took forty minutes.

Afterwards, Blériot became a successful businessman, with his Société Pour Aviation et ses Derives manufacturing thousands of Allied planes in World War I.

[edit] Rumor

  • It is said that Blériot's signature moustache was inspired by his passion for winged flight.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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