Lyman Gilmore
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Lyman Wiswell Gilmore, Jr. (June 11, 1874 - February 18, 1951) was an aviation pioneer. In Grass Valley, California, USA, he built a steam-powered airplane and claimed that he flew it on May 15, 1902. Due to the requirement of a heavy boiler and the dependency on coal as a power source, the flights would have only been short. Potential proofs of his claim were lost in a 1935 hangar fire.
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[edit] First flight
An eccentric man, some people who remember him claim that Lyman Gilmore stank to high heaven, vowed to never cut his hair or beard, and wore a trench coat even in the middle of summer. The coat contained not only all of his papers but two pistols.
Lyman built a steam-powered airplane and claimed that he flew it on May 15, 1902.
Any remaining proof he beat the Wright Brothers was lost when he was forcefully deprived of his trench coat for a delousing, and the coat was subsequently burned along with all the papers he carried in it.
There are photographs from 1898 showing Gilmore's machine, but none showing the plane in the air.
[edit] Work
Lyman Gilmore was in contact with other flight pioneers like Samuel Langley and, eventually, the Wright brothers.
In 1902, Gilmore was granted two patents on steam engines, the first of which was granted in 1902. He invented in other areas too, for example a rotary snowplow. On March 15, 1907, Gilmore opened the first commercial airfield, Gilmore Airfield, in Grass Valley.
After the fire in his hangar, Gilmore began mining for gold and died a poor man in Nevada City, California. His grave can be found in Pine Grove Cemetery, about a half mile outside of town.
[edit] See also
- Early flight - for other pre-Wright-brothers inventors.
- Mystery airship