|
The Major Trophy Races of the Golden
Age of Air Racing
The major air racing trophy contests of the 1920s and 1930s
produced arguably the most exciting competitions in aviation
history and contributed significantly to the advancement of
aeronautics. From the end of World War I to the beginning
of World War II--a period known as the "Golden Age of
Air Racing"--thousands of spectators flocked to the era's
four major trophy races and watched several record-breaking
performances.
During the Great Depression, a handful of manufacturing companies
and wealthy aviation enthusiasts sponsored several major air
races. They offered large cash prizes to the aviators who
could build the fastest planes and race them to victory. These
major races enticed several designers and pilots to enter
their own aircraft in the contests. They also led to many
aeronautical innovations as engineers developed highly maneuverable
aircraft that could race at breakneck speeds. Interestingly,
one of the notable themes that also developed during the history
of these competitions was the struggle between government-supported
military flight teams and smaller groups of civilian engineer-aviators.
The Schneider Trophy Race was the first of the golden age's
contests. Jacques Schneider, a wealthy French industrialist
with an interest in advancing the speed of seaplanes, founded
the international competition in the early 1910s. The Schneider
Trophy racecourses ran out over open water. Schneider stipulated
that if a nation won the trophy three times in a row, that
country would become the race's overall permanent champion.
The first two Schneider Trophy Races, which were held in
Monaco in April 1913 and 1914, were mainly competitions between
teams of civilian aviators. French pilot Maurice Prevost won
the inaugural race. When World War I began, Schneider had
to suspend the contest. After the war, when the race resumed,
it became a much different type of event, as government-backed
military aviators started to dominate the major trophy races.
When the Schneider returned, it generally became a three-way
contest among military teams from the United States, England,
and Italy. All three governments poured money into their national
teams, and winning became a point of national honor. Thanks
to this increased funding, several technological advancements
took place in seaplane design, and numerous new air speed
records soon followed.
One of the first significant victories that occurred after
the war took place on October 26, 1925, when U.S. Army Lt.
Jimmy Doolittle won the Schneider
while piloting the Curtiss R3C-1 racer that another U.S. Army
flyer, Lt. Cyrus Bettis, had flown only two weeks before in
another air race, the Pulitzer race. In Doolittle's hands,
the Curtiss, specially reconfigured with wooden floats and
redesignated the R3C-2, handled like a charm. In fact, a day
after he won the Schneider, Doolittle set a new world speed
record for seaplanes in the R3C-2 at 245.7 miles per hour
(395 kilometers per hour).
After Doolittle's victory, the Schneider Trophy changed hands.
In 1926, the Italians captured the prize with their sleek
Macchi M39. Then, in 1927, the British claimed the first of
three victories in a row. From 1927 onward, the English dominated
the Schneider until they became the outright champions in
1931 (the race had become biannual by then).

Britain permanently secured the Schneider with the Supermarine
6B, a seaplane developed with government support. This plane
embodied the day's best aerodynamic advances, and in a way,
epitomized all of the efforts that America, England, and Italy
had put into their Schneider racers. In September 1931, the
Supermarine set a new absolute world air speed record of 407.5
miles per hour (656 kilometers per hour); up to that time,
the world record for land planes had been a mere 278.5 miles
per hour (448 kilometers per hour). In the late 1930s, the
Supermarine 6B become the model for one of World War II's
best aircraft--the Spitfire fighters that helped defend England
during the Battle of Britain.
The second major trophy race of the period was the Pulitzer,
established in 1920 by American publishing magnate, Ralph
Pulitzer, who created the speed contest to encourage U.S.
designers to build faster airplanes. The first race took place
in November 1920 at Mitchell Field, Long Island. U.S. Army
Lt. C.C. Moseley, racing around the pylon-marked course, won
the event. During the Pulitzer's six-year history, military
pilots won each competition, thanks to the fact that the U.S.
military had the best American aircraft at the time. U.S.
Army Lt. Cyrus Bettis won the Pulitzer's final running in
October 1925 with his Curtiss R3C-1 racer, a plane that the
U.S. government had spent some $500,000 developing. This was
the same plane that Jimmy Doolittle would fly to victory in
the Schneider two weeks later.
As the Schneider Trophy Race was coming to a close, a new
contest was being born. In 1929, two brothers from California,
Clifford and Phillip Henderson, persuaded Cleveland manufacturer
Charles Thompson to sponsor the third major trophy contest
of the era. The Thompson Trophy Race, which was intended to
encourage the design of faster land planes, became the showcase
of the new National Air Races.
The Thompson was a closed circuit, pylon-marked contest,
similar to the Pulitzer, with one major exception. Rather
than planes competing one at a time, the Thompson was a horse
race in the air: pilots started together and jockeyed for
position. The high speed, low-altitude race, which made tight
turns around the pylons, was extremely exciting. As one Thompson
racer noted: "It was a toss-up whether everybody was
going to get to that first pylon alive." Of the major
trophy races, the Thompson was the most popular.
Although the military had dominated the Pulitzer and Schneider
races, civilian pilots and homebuilt planes tended to excel
in the Thompson contest. In 1929, Doug Davis shocked everyone
when he piloted a Travel Air Model R "Mystery Ship"
to victory over the best the military had. Even though Jimmy
Doolittle, an army aviator, won the 1932 race, he did so in
a privately manufactured plane--one of the infamous Gee Bees.
Notably, Doolittle had established a new world speed record
for landplanes in the same aircraft a few days before his
victory.
Some of the Thompson's other noteworthy pilots included Roscoe
Turner, Jimmy Wedell, and Benny Howard. Turner did the unthinkable
when he won three Thompsons, a feat that no one ever matched.
Jimmy Wedell, a Texan who supposedly built his first racer
from a chalk outline he had made on the floor, won the 1933
contest. And Benny Howard, the maker of the "Damned [or
'Darned,' depending upon the source] Good Airplane,"
flew his own Mister Mulligan to victory in 1935. That same
year, Howard became the only person to win not only the Thompson,
but also the Bendix, the National Air Races' other major contest.
The Bendix Trophy Race, the fourth major air competition,
began in 1931 after the Henderson Brothers convinced industrialist
Vincent Bendix to sponsor a transcontinental, point-to-point
race. The main intent behind the event was to interest engineers
in building faster, more reliable, and enduring aircraft,
which in turn, would directly affect the future of commercial
aviation. During the 1930s, the Bendix competitors flew from
Burbank, California, to Cleveland, except for two years when
the contest began in New York and ended in Los Angeles.
Some of the Bendix's standouts included Jimmy Doolittle,
who won the inaugural event; Roscoe Turner, who captured the
trophy in 1933; Doug Davis who piloted a Wedell-Williams aircraft
to victory in 1934; and significantly, several women. In 1936,
Louise Thaden and her copilot Blanche Noyes won the Bendix,
defeating some of the world's best male pilots. Laura Ingalls
finished second. Two years later, Jackie Cochran, arguably
the greatest female aviator, won the contest. All in all,
female and civilian pilots excelled in the Bendix.
After the Golden Age of Air Racing, air races became less
common. High-performance aircraft were becoming a government
secret, and the military, which owned the fastest planes,
tested them mainly in private. Air racing consequently lost
much of the appeal it had exhibited in the 1920s and 1930s.
In addition to providing some spectacular entertainment and
record setting performances, the national trophy races encouraged
engineers to make some truly significant aeronautical advances.
To make their planes go as fast as possible, and perform their
very best, designers developed retractable landing gear, streamlined
cockpits, wing flaps, variable-pitch propellers, and supercharged
engines. Perhaps these innovations were the most important
legacy of the national trophy races.
|