Inventors
|
|
William Scripps and The Detroit
News Autogiro
|
|
When autogiros were first developed in the 1920s
many people saw them as the next “big thing” in
aviation. Autogiros could take-off and land in a
fraction of the space required by standard planes
with fixed wings. Some enthusiasts thought they could
become everyman’s airplane, used for door-to-door
commuting like automobiles. One of the people who
caught the autogiro bug was William E. Scripps, publisher
of the Detroit News.
Scripps was fascinated by aviation. He met the Wright
brothers in 1909, and by 1912 became the first man
in Michigan to own and fly an airplane. In the same
year he took Detroit News photographer William
Kuenzel up in his plane to shoot the first aerial
photos of Detroit. Under Scripps direction, the Detroit
News continued to use airplanes for aerial photography,
and in 1929 the paper purchased a Lockheed Vega,
one of the hottest planes of the day. The innovative
autogiro seemed like a perfect plane for newspaper
use, so Scripps had the News purchase one 1931.
|
1 of 2 |
|
|