I’m Absolutely Parched!
The driest place on earth, in terms of annual precipitation, is:
- The Sahara Desert
- Death Valley, CA
- the Gobi Desert
- Antofagasta, Chile
Friends In High Places
Of the following early airmail pilots, who doesn’t belong?
- Charles Lindbergh
- Elrey Jeppesen
- Leonard Brooke Hyde-Pearson
- George H. Boyle
As far as careers advanced (or at least of those hoping to lurch forward out of obscurity) it is sometimes not what you know, but whom. One case in point is U.S. Army Lt. George H. Boyle, dashing in appearance, but inept as far as actual airmanship. He was an aspiring air mail pilot, and he enjoyed the conspicuous convenience of being engaged to the daughter of the Interstate Commerce Commissioner who had influenced the government to allow Army pilots to fly the mail. Technically, he was the first airmail pilot to fly along an established route, on May 15, 1918. (Airmail flights had been flown however, as early as 1911.) While President Woodrow Wilson and the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, looked on, he began his flight to Philadelphia from Washington D.C. by departing to the South (in the wrong direction). Despite having had maps plastered to his legs by his superior, he promptly became lost and landed in a soft field, nosing over. Then the next day (and with a new propeller), that same superior officer gave him explicit instructions for a second attempt, which involved the simple directive that he should keep the Chesapeake Bay on his right. He even flew alongside him up to the northern end of the bay. Once on his own however, he followed his orders to the letter (sorry) and he flew in a big circle, around the bay. When he landed (and didn’t in fact crash) to take on more fuel, he then actually used some rudimentary navigation and reached the general vicinity of his intended destination. He chose a landing site (but the wrong one, and much too short), and wrecked the plane (only this time, more thoroughly) when he crash-landed on a golf course. Naturally, by that point he had seriously jeopardized his budding airmail career. To be fair, pilots had only a simple magnetic compass and the maps of the time showed large cities, but little of elevations or landmarks. Still, you have to wonder. As regards the above list of airmail pilots, all of the above technically did have that title at one time. But one fellow, choice D in this case, didn’t have it for long.
Blind Ambition
The first person to make an intentional “blind” landing was
- Omar Bradley
- Wesley L. Smith
- Jimmy Doolittle
- Arthur Godfrey
According to “Flying As It Was” by Gerry Casey, the person who actually performed “blind flying” tests before Jimmy Doolittle was one Wesley L. Smith. An aspiring opera singer, a degreed engineering student (with honors, no less), as well as a pilot, his first attempts at such involved simply ruddering a compass heading and using the tachometer and engine noise (as “primary” indicators) for altitude control. On May 20, 1920, he used a fixed loop antenna to fly a triangular course while under a hood (only in this case I suspect that it was the “cover your head” variety). During the following nine years, he worked with Howard Salisbury, who (the book says) developed the turn-and-bank indicator as well as a sensitive altimeter, and on February 6, 1929, over seven months before Jimmy Doolittle, he successfully landed a Douglas M-4 somewhere near Cleveland in actual zero-zero conditions (which had developed during his flight) right in the center of the airport. This may be simply dumb luck, but it was done somewhat intentionally (mostly because he had to). It’s B.

