- Bellanca Airfield
The Bellanca Airfield was an airfield, aircraft plant, and service hangar built in 1928 by Guiseppe Bellanca and Henry B. DuPont in
New Castle, Delaware . Located off Route 273 near theDelaware River , the plant produced approximately 3000 aircraft before closing in 1954.History
Guiseppe Mario Bellanca immigrated from
Italy in 1912 and continued his passion for aircraft design in the United States. His aircraft achieved numerous endurance and efficiency records. His $25,000 WB-2 monoplane, "Columbia", was the first choice of Charles Lindbergh for his trans-Atlantic flight after, on April 25, 1927, Clarence Chamberlin and Bert Acosta set the world endurance record for aircraft, staying aloft circling New York City for 51 hours, 11 minutes, and 25 seconds and covering 4,100 miles, more than the 3,600 mile from New York to Paris. "Time" magazine reported onApril 25 ,1927 :Engineer
Giuseppe M. Bellanca of theColumbia Aircraft Corporation had conditioned an elderly yellow-winged monoplane with one Wright motor, and scouted around for pilots. Lieut.Leigh Wade , round-the-world flyer, declined the invitation, saying Mr. Bellanca's plans were too stunt-like, not scientific. Shrugging, Mr. Bellanca engaged PilotsClarence Duncan Chamberlin and burly Bert Acosta, onetime auto speedster, to test his ship's endurance. Up they put fromMitchel Field, Long Island , with 385 gallons of ethylated (high power) gasoline. All day they droned back and forth over suburbia, circled theWoolworth Building , hovered overHadley Field, New Jersey , swung back to drop notes on Mitchell Field. All that starry night they wandered slowly around the sky, and all the next day, and through the next night, a muggy, cloudy one. Newsgatherers flew up alongside to shout unintelligible things through megaphones. Messrs. Acosta and Chamberlain were looking tired and oil-blobbed. They swallowed soup and sandwiches, caught catnaps on the mattressed fuel tank, while on and on they droned, almost lazily (about 80 m.p.h.) for they were cruising against time. Not for 51 hours, 11 minutes, 25 seconds, did they coast to earth, having broken the U.S. and world's records for protracted flight. In the same time, conditions favoring, they could have flown fromManhattan toVienna . They had covered 4,100 miles. To Paris it is 3,600 miles from Manhattan. Jubilant, Engineer Bellanca's employers offered competitors a three-hour headstart in the race to Paris. TheBellanca monoplane's normal cruising speed is 110 m.p.h. She would require only some 35 hours to reach Paris—if she could stay up that long again. [cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Paris Preliminaries |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,730448,00.html |quote=EngineerGiuseppe M. Bellanca of theColumbia Aircraft Corporation had conditioned an elderly yellow-winged monoplane with one Wright motor, and scouted around for pilots. Lieut.Leigh Wade , round-the-world flyer, declined the invitation, saying Mr. Bellanca's plans were too stunt-like, not scientific. |publisher="Time" |date=April 25 ,1927 |accessdate=2007-09-25 ]Lindbergh was unable to get the plane, and two weeks after Lindbergh's flight, the "Columbia" flew non-stop from
New York toBerlin, Germany , a trip of 3,911 miles which was again longer than the 3,600 mile trip Lindbergh made from New York City to Berlin to capture theOrteig Prize .References
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