- Anthony Fokker
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name = Anthony Fokker
image_size = 150px
caption = Anthony Fokker, posing for a German postcard inWorld War I
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birth_date =6 April 1890
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death_date =23 December 1939
death_place =Murray Hill Hospital
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occupation =aircraft manufacturer
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footnotes =Anton Herman Gerard Fokker (
6 April 1890 –23 December 1939 ) was a pioneer inaviation and a Dutch-Americanaircraft manufacturer .Early life
Anthony (Tony) Fokker was born in
Kediri, East Java (thenDutch East Indies , nowIndonesia ), son of Herman Fokker, a Dutch coffeeplantation owner.Four years later the family returned to the
Netherlands and settled inHaarlem in order to provide Tony and his older sister, Toos, with a Dutch upbringing. Tony was not studious but rather played with model trains and steam engines, and he did not complete his high school education. He devised a leak-proof tire but this was not an original invention and was already patented.Move to Germany
In 1910, at age 20, Fokker was sent by his father to
Germany to receive training as amechanic . Yet his interest was in flying, prompting him to change schools. [ [http://www.dutch-aviation.nl/index5/index5-3%20Fokker%20biografie.html Anthony Fokker Biography] ] That same year Fokker built his first aircraft "de Spin" ("the Spider"), which was destroyed by his business partner who flew it into a tree. He gained hispilot license in his second "Spin" aircraft. In his own country, he became a celebrity by flying around the tower of theSint-Bavokerk inHaarlem on31 August 1911 , with the third version of the "Spin". He also added to his fame by flying on the birthday ofQueen Wilhelmina .In 1912, Fokker moved to
Johannisthal nearBerlin where he founded his first own company, "Fokker Aeroplanbau". In the following years he constructed a variety of airplanes. He relocated his factory toSchwerin where it was renamed "Fokker Flugzeugwerke GmbH", and later shortened to "Fokker Werke GmbH".Involvement in World War I
At the onset of
World War I , the German government took control of the factory. Fokker remained as director and designed many aircraft for the Imperial German Army Air Service (Luftstreitkräfte ), including theFokker Eindecker and theFokker Dr.I , the triplane made famous in the hands of aces such asManfred von Richthofen (the Red Baron). In all, his company delivered about 700 military planes to the German air force.Fokker himself appears to have been an accomplished pilot, demonstrating his aircraft on numerous occasions. [van Wyngarden] On 13 June, 1915, Fokker demonstrated the new Fokker Eindecker at
Stenay in the German 5th Army Sector in front of the German Crown Prince and other VIPs. Fokker worked closely with an accomplished military pilot,Otto Parschau , to bring the Eindecker into military use and on this occasion both men demonstrated the aircraft.Max Immelmann , later to come become a high-scoringFlying Ace with the Eindecker, commented in a letter written shortly after this event that: "Fokker, especially, amazed us with his skill." [van Wyngarden]The interrupter gear
Fokker is often cited as having invented the synchronisation device which enabled 1st World War aircraft to fire through the spinning
propellor . His role was certainly significant but there were a number of prior developments before the result was achieved for which Fokker is rightly credited.The famous French pilot
Roland Garros was shot down on18 April 1915 . His aircraft had been fitted with a deflector device, whereby metal deflector wedges were fitted to the airscrew. Garros was able to set fire to the airframe before being taken prisoner but the aircraft's gun and the armoured propellor remained intact and came into German hands. [van Wyngarden, G. "Early German Aces of World War 1". Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1-84176-997-5.]This initiated a phase of consideration of the interrupter gear concept in the Imperial German Army Air Service ("
Luftstreitkräfte "). Fokker was heavily involved in this process but the story of his conception, development and installation of a synchronisation device in a period of 48 hours (first found in an authorised biography of Fokker written in 1929) has been shown to be not factual. The available evidence points to a synchronisation device having been in development with Fokker's company for perhaps six months prior to the capture of Garros' machine. [van Wyngarden]However the final result of the development was Fokker's
pushrod control mechanism, "Gestangesteuerung" which allowed the aircraft's forward-firing machine gun to fire only when the propellor was out of the line of fire. As incorporated into the famousFokker Eindecker its use directly led to a phase of German air-superiority known as theFokker Scourge .Return to the Netherlands
After the war's end, the terms of the
Treaty of Versailles forbade Germany to build any aircraft oraircraft engine s. In 1919 Fokker returned to the Netherlands and started a new aircraft company, the "Nederlandse Vliegtuigenfabriek" (Dutch Aircraft Factory), predecessor to the Fokker Aircraft Company. Despite the strict disarmament conditions in the Treaty, Fokker did not return home empty-handed: he managed to smuggle an entire train's worth of D.VII and C.I military planes and spare parts across the German-Dutch border. This initial stock enabled him to quickly set up shop, but his focus shifted from military to civil aircraft such as the very successfulFokker F.VII trimotor .On
25 March 1919 , Fokker married Sophie Marie Elisabeth von Morgen inHaarlem . This marriage lasted four years.Move to the US and death
In 1922, he moved to the
United States and later became an American citizen. Here he established the American branch of his company, the Atlantic Aircraft Corporation. In 1927, Fokker married Violet Austman inNew York City .He died in New York in 1939 from
pneumococcous meningitis . He had been ill for three weeks, and was 49 years old. [ [http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20711FF3A54107A93C6AB1789D95F4D8385F9 "A.H.G. Fokker Dies."] "New York Times ",24 December 1939 . Retrieved:29 June 2008 . Quote: "Anthony H.G. Fokker, pioneer airplane designer, manufacturer and promoter, died yesterday morning at Murray Hill Hospital, where he had been ill of pneumococcous meningitis for the last three weeks. He was 49 years old."]Popular culture
* Fokker's
nickname wasThe Flying Dutchman .
*Roy Focker , a central character inThe Super Dimension Fortress Macross (adapted as Roy Fokker in theMacross Saga ofRobotech ), was most likely named after Anthony Fokker and his Fokker aircraft. In flashback sequences, Roy flies aFokker D.VII in his youth, and even gives his friendHikaru Ichijyo (Robotech'sRick Hunter ) a model of one as a gift.References
Notes
Bibliography
* Boyne, Walter J. "The Smithsonian Book of Flight for Young People". Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institute, 1988. ISBN 0-689-31422-1.
* Dierikx, Marc. "Fokker: A Transatlantic Biography". Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997. ISBN 1-56098-735-9.
* Molson, K.M. "Pioneering in Canadian Air Transport". Winnipeg: James Richardson & Sons, Ltd., 1974. ISBN 0-919212-39-5.
* Nevin, David. "The Pathfinders" (The Epic of Flight Series). Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books, 1980. ISBN 0-8094-3256-0.
* Postma, Thijs. "Fokker: Aircraft Builders to the World". London: Jane's, 1979. ISBN 0-531-03708-0.
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