Emile Taddéoli

Emile Taddéoli

Emile Taddéoli in 1920
Born 8 March 1879(1879-03-08)
Geneva, Switzerland
Died 24 May 1920(1920-05-24) (aged 41)
Romanshorn, Switzerland
Nationality Swiss
Occupation Pilot, instructor, test pilot
Known for Pilot's brevet number 2 issued in Switzerland on October 10, 1910
Most prominent pioneer using seaplanes in Switzerland

Emile Taddéoli (March 8, 1879 in Geneva – May 24, 1920 in Romanshorn) was a Swiss aviation pioneer. He was active as a pilot, instructor, test pilot, and also the probably most prominent pioneer using seaplanes in Switzerland. Taddéoli received the pilot's brevet number 2 issued in Switzerland on October 10, 1910.

Contents

Years of the flight pioneers

Emile Taddéoli's passion for engines and mechanics started at a very young age. After some success as cyclist on vélodrome in Varambé (GE) in 1893/94, motorcyclist (he designed a prototype), mechanic and car driver from 1895 to 1909, he was attracted by the aviation that became very popular in Switzerland in 1908/9. Inspired by Alberto Santos-Dumont and Louis Blériot, in March 1909 Taddéoli left Switzerland for Mourmelon (F) to learn how to fly at the Ecole d’aviation Blériot. On March 22, 1910, he started his first flight over 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) in his newly bought Blériot XI. Despite his relatively low experience he participated, beginning in April 1910, at several flight meetings in Italy, France and Portugal, and proposed by Armand Dufaux, he overflew Paris on July 18, 1910. Back in Geneva, he started flying around Switzerland, got several prizes (flight over 161 minutes and others) in his Blériot number 8, succeeding again in the first overflight of the canton of Geneva on September 7, 1910.

Flight meetings and flight records

In his newly acquired Dufaux 4 biplane, from September to October 1910 he became the instruction pilot for Armand Dufaux and Henri Dufaux. During the flight meeting in Luzern in September 1910, Emil Taddéoli collided with a line of trees just before landing; he left the wreck of his airplane unhurt; another pilot, Hans Schmid, fatally crashed. This tragic accident started a crisis when the Swiss newspapers denounced what they called an unuseful aerial circus.[1]

At the flight meeting in Brig, he tried to overfly the Alps for the first time. On a meeting in Bern with six pilots, he succeeded in a flight over 58 minutes at an altitude of 600 metres (2,000 ft). On October 10, 1910, Emile Taddéoli received the Swiss pilot's licence number 2; number 1 was issued to Ernest Failloubaz.[2]

On October 10, 1910, Taddéoli won a generous prize at the flight meeting in Bern after having reached an altitude of 350 metres (1,150 ft); this prize and the returns of several demonstration flights – 120 kilometres per hour (75 mph) in November 1910, Viry-Lausanne-Blécherette in 60 minutes (80 kilometres (50 mi)) on May 31, 1911, overflying Carouge and Geneva at an altitude of 400 metres (1,300 ft), the Swiss record in a flight over 125 kilometres (78 mi) – allowed him to buy, in April of the following year, a Morane-Borel monoplane, succeeding in flight meetings among them in Lausanne, Annecy (F), Viry, Lugano, Avenches, Geneva (altitude of 900 metres (3,000 ft)), Bern, Planeyse, Dübendorf etc.

Seaplanes and later years

In June 1911, in co-operation with Edouard Perrot (Edouard Perrot & Cie), Taddéoli started to design the seaplane "La Mouette", and before, began tests with a Dufaux 4 biplane equipped with swimmers. On June 24/25, 1911, during a flight meeting in Annecy (F), he crashed in a Dufaux 5 on Lake Geneva. On March 26, 1912, a first takeoff was not successful, and "La Mouette" was destroyed.[3] While taking off to fly from Bern to Biel/Bienne on June 3, 1913, he lost a wheel but the good fortune was again with him. Oskar Bider witnessed the incident and took off with the wheel to catch up Taddéoli to him of the danger: Taddéoli landed without problems in Bienne.[1] During the following years, Taddeoli went through all joy and sadness of a show pilot. Rewards, further emergency landings, records and incidents succeeded one another, among them a flight race Naples–Rome–Naples and 45 flight meetings within 53 months. His application to join the military aviation troops was rejected because he was married.

For a while he earned his living flying passengers, later he left Switzerland for Sesto Calende on the southern tip of Lago Maggiore where he was hired as test pilot for Savoia in mid-1914. This manufacturer of hydroplanes was the leader in Europe and SIAI S.13 seaplanes was a bestselling aircraft. During these five years of activity, Taddéoli did proceed at the reception and made more than 2,700 flight tests, flying about 150,000 kilometres (93,000 mi)!

In January 1919, he was pioneering again in crossing the Apennine Mountains in a seaplane between Sesto Calende and San Remo. On July 12, 1919, with a passenger on board, he flew from Calende on Lago Maggiore to Lake Geneva in 110 minutes, overflying the Mont Blanc (4,695 metres (15,404 ft)) massif in his Savoia S-13.

In July 1919 he became director and chief pilot for Avion Tourisme SA; on October 12, 1919, he started as chief pilot on seaplanes for the latter Ad Astra Aero S.A. On April 7, 1920, he was pioneering again in crossing the Alps from Lugano to Geneva in 85 minutes with a passenger (Eric Debétaz) on board.

On May 24, 1920, Emile Taddéoli, acting as Ad Astra Aero's chief pilot for seaplanes, and Y. Giovanelli, his 23 years old mechanic, died during a demonstration flight at an air show in Romanshorn aboard their Savoia S.13 flying boat, disintegrating in flight at an altitude of 700 metres (2,300 ft).

Honor

Emile Taddéoli was honored by the Italian king for his merits as Chevalier de l'ordre royal d'Italie. A monument on his grave in Geneva was inaugurated in 1932, and a train was named after Emile Taddéoli.

References

External links

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Emile_Tadd%C3%A9oli Emile Taddéoli] at Wikimedia Commons