L'Oiseau Blanc
L'Oiseau Blanc | |
---|---|
1927 postcard showing L'Oiseau Blanc, with pictures of Nungesser (left) and Coli (right) | |
Type | Levasseur PL.8 |
Construction number | PL.8-01 |
First flight | April 1927 |
Fate | Disappeared during transatlantic flight attempt |
L'Oiseau Blanc (English: The White Bird[note 1]) was a French Levasseur PL.8 biplane that disappeared in 1927 during an attempt to make the first non-stop transatlantic flight between Paris and New York City to compete for the Orteig Prize. French World War I aviation heroes Charles Nungesser (third highest French ace with 43 air combat victories during World War I) and François Coli took off from Paris on 8 May 1927 and were last seen over Ireland. Less than two weeks later, Charles Lindbergh successfully made the New York–Paris journey and claimed the prize in the Spirit of St. Louis.
The disappearance of L'Oiseau Blanc is considered one of the great mysteries in the history of aviation.
The disappearance of Nungesser and Coli has an extensive legacy and is referred to in many films and museums. A street in Paris is named after them and a commemorative postage stamp was issued in 1967. A statue at the Paris
Background
In 1919, New York hotel owner Raymond Orteig offered the $25,000 Orteig Prize (approximately equivalent to $439,000 in 2023) to the first aviators to make a non-stop transatlantic flight between New York and Paris in the next five years.[3] No one won the prize, so he renewed the offer in 1924. At that point, aviation technology was more advanced and many people were working toward winning it.[4] Most were attempting to fly from New York to Paris, but a number of French aviators planned to fly from Paris to New York.[5]
François Coli, age 45, was a World War I veteran and recipient of the
Design and development
At the
Major modifications included the reinforcement of the plywood fuselage, and removing two of the forward cockpits so the main cockpit could be widened to allow Nungesser and Coli to sit side by side. The wingspan was also increased to approximately 15 m (49 ft). Two additional fuel tanks were mounted aft of the firewall, meaning the PL.8's three fuel tanks held a total of 4,025 L (1,063 US gal) of gasoline.[10]
The PL.8 also incorporated several safety features in case of ditching at sea. Apart from small floats attached directly to the undersides of the lower wing, the main units of the fixed, tailskid undercarriage could be jettisoned on takeoff, in order to reduce the aircraft's weight. The underside of the fuselage was given a boat-like shape and made watertight for a water landing. Nungesser and Coli's plan was to make a water landing in New York, in front of the Statue of Liberty.[7]
A single W-12 Lorraine-Dietrich 340 kilowatts (460 hp) engine was used, with the cylinders set in three banks angled 60° apart from one another, similar to the arrangement used in Napier engines. The engine was tested to ensure it would last the entire flight, and was run for over 40 hours while still in the Parisian factory.[2]
The aircraft, christened L'Oiseau Blanc, was painted white,[note 2] and had the French tricolor markings, with Nungesser's personal World War I flying ace logo: a skull and crossbones, candles and a coffin, on a black heart, painted on the fuselage.[12] The biplane carried no radio[note 3] and relied only on celestial navigation, a specialty of Coli from his previous flights around the Mediterranean.[7]
In 1928, a second PL-8, and equipped with a Hispano-Suiza 12M, 375 kW (500 hp) engine, was built.[14]
Operational history
In April 1927, the PL.8-01 was shipped from the factory for Nungesser to begin a series of proving tests to determine aircraft performance. Most of the flights were conducted around
The evaluations proceeded successfully through the flight envelope without major changes required to the basic design. The only incident of note was a fire that broke out in the hangar where the PL.8-01 had been stored. Scorched fabric on the top wing was the result with effective repairs carried out shortly after. On 7 May 1927, after the tests were complete, the aircraft was prepared for its record flight, flying from Villacoublay to
Transatlantic attempt
Nungesser and Coli took off at 5:17 am, 8 May 1927 from Le Bourget Field in Paris, heading for New York.[12][16] Their PL.8-01 weighed 5,000 kg (11,000 lb) on takeoff, extremely heavy for a single-engined aircraft, barely clearing a line of trees at the end of the field.[17] Gathering an escort of French fighter aircraft, Nungesser and Coli turned back as planned, and at low altitude, immediately jettisoned the main undercarriage.[2]
The intended flight path was a great circle route, which would have taken them across the English Channel, over the southwestern part of England and Ireland, across the Atlantic to Newfoundland, then south over Nova Scotia, to Boston, and finally to a water landing in New York.[18][19]
Once in the air, the biplane was escorted to the French coast by four military aircraft led by French Air Force Captain Venson, and sighted from the coastal town of Étretat.[17] A sighting was made by the commanding officer of the British submarine HMS H50, who recorded the note in his log, that he observed a biplane at 300 m altitude, 20 nautical miles southwest of the tip of Needles on the Isle of Wight. In Ireland, an aircraft overhead was reported by a resident of the town of Dungarvan and a Catholic priest reported a sighting over the village of Carrigaholt, then no further verified reports were made.[20]
Crowds of people gathered in New York to witness the historic arrival, with tens of thousands of people crowding
In the immediate aftermath of their disappearance, an international search was launched to find Nungesser and Coli. Aviation Digest sponsored a well-known pilot,
Twelve days after Nungesser and Coli's departure, Charles Lindbergh, flying solo in the Spirit of Saint Louis, took off from New York on his own famous journey. After a flight of 33 hours, 30 minutes, he received a hero's welcome when he arrived in Paris, even as the French mourned the loss of Nungesser and Coli.[23]
Mystery
The mainstream view was that L'Oiseau Blanc crashed over the Atlantic due to a squall. Nonetheless, 12 witnesses in Newfoundland and Maine claimed to have heard the aircraft as it passed overhead. Residents at Harbour Grace, Newfoundland, reported sighting a white aircraft circling in haze or fog late on 9 May 1927. There were no aircraft on the island and no overflights taking place, and the local newspapers highlighted a "mystery" aircraft.[24] If these sightings were of L'Oiseau Blanc, it would indicate that the flight was far behind schedule, as they would have been in the 40th hour of flight. This delay could be explained, however, by the fact that the aircraft was flying against the prevailing weather pattern. Fishermen off the coast of Newfoundland reported that the weather had turned cold and foul, which might have caused the delay.[12] In May 1927, the US Coast Guard found an airplane wing in Napeague Bay at Fort Pond Bay, Long Island Sound;[25][26] aircraft wreckage was seen in August 1927, 200 miles off the New York Coast.[27]
There were many rumors concerning the aircraft's disappearance, including a theory that the aviators had been shot down by
In 1984, the French government made an official investigation, concluding that it was possible that the aircraft had reached Newfoundland.[5][18] In 1989, the NBC television series Unsolved Mysteries advanced the theory that the two aviators made it across the ocean but crashed and perished in the woods of Maine. Nungesser's relative William Nungesser made several trips to Maine to search, focusing his energies around the north slope of Round Lake Hills in Washington County as well as the area around Lake Winnipesaukee.[12]
Clive Cussler and his NUMA organization also attempted to solve the mystery, searching for the aircraft in Maine and in Newfoundland. They made multiple visits in the 1980s and interviewed hunters, fishermen, and others who said that they had seen or heard the aircraft pass by in 1927.
The NUMA expedition was named "Midnight Ghost"[8] after Lindbergh's comment in The Spirit of St. Louis that Nungesser and Coli had "vanished like midnight ghosts".[14][29] In 1992, divers traveled to Newfoundland and searched Great Gull Pond for a wreck, but they found nothing and were not even sure that they had located the right lake.[29][30] Other lakes were also searched, from Machias to Chesterfield.[32]
Certain pieces were found[by whom?] which did suggest that L'Oiseau Blanc had made it to the continent. Little of the aircraft would have remained, since it was created primarily from plywood and canvas. The parts most likely to endure would have been the engine and the aluminum fuel tanks.[2][12][32][33] In Maine[where?], bits and pieces of struts were found, and wood similar to the kind used to build the biplane. Engine metal was also found near the town of Machias that was not typical to the United States or Canada. Two residents described a large metal object, a "really big motor", which had been dragged out of the woods for salvage along a logging path.[12][29] In 2011, the Wall Street Journal reported that an unofficial French team was focusing on theories that the aircraft crashed off the coast of Canada after flying over Newfoundland.[34]
In 2022 Josh Gates along with some experts from the Archeology Department in St. John’s, Newfoundland went out to Gull Lake and found pieces of wreckage in the water of some sort of circular lid type metal and some wire that was of the correct time frame material for the lost flight. The team hypothesized that the biplane was running low on fuel as the calculations were off, and the pilots, trying to find water to land on, chose Gull Lake, but did not account for a large rocky island in the middle of the lake. They believe the plane hit the island and exploded, blasting debris towards the deeper parts of the lake. The bodies of the pilots may be in the lake still. This flight path is backed by several sworn eyewitness accounts and a mention of three explosions: likely the fuel tanks did explode.[citation needed]
Legacy
The disappearance of L'Oiseau Blanc has been called "the Everest of aviation mysteries". TIGHAR, The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, has called the aircraft, "History's Most Important Missing Airplane".[2] It has been claimed that if the aircraft had successfully completed its journey, Lindbergh would not qualify for the Orteig Prize. When Lindbergh did succeed with his own flight across the Atlantic, the international attention on his achievement was possibly enhanced because of the disappearance of 'L'Oiseau Blanc just days earlier. It is also suggested that it was Lindbergh's historic success which gave a major boost to the American aviation industry, without which the course of America's military and industrial accomplishments might have been quite different.[32]
A monument was erected in Étretat in 1927, to mark the last place from which the biplane was seen in France, but it was destroyed in 1942 by the occupying German army. A new 24 m (79 ft) high monument, the "Monument Nungesser et Coli", was erected in 1963 atop one of the cliffs. There is also a nearby museum.[35][36]
In 1928, the Ontario Surveyor General named a number of lakes in the northwest of the province to honour aviators who had perished during 1927, mainly in attempting oceanic flights.[39][40] Amongst these are Coli Lake (51°19′N 93°35′W / 51.32°N 93.59°W) and Nungesser Lake (51°29′N 93°31′W / 51.49°N 93.52°W).
The fate of L'Oiseau Blanc is occasionally mentioned in literature and films. The 1999 made-for-TV Canadian film Restless Spirits, a children's film with the alternate title Dead Aviators, uses the mystery of Nungesser and Coli's disappearance as the key plot device. A young girl, who struggles with her pilot father's death in an aircraft crash years before, visits her grandmother in Newfoundland. While there, she encounters the ghosts of Nungesser and Coli, whose restless spirits constantly relive their own unheralded 1927 crash in a nearby pond. The girl decides to help the pair move on to the afterlife by assisting them in rebuilding their aircraft and completing their flight so they may be released and, by doing so, works through her own emotional distress over her father's test flight death.[41] In the opening montage of the 2005 film Sahara, based on Cussler's novel, a French newspaper article is displayed reporting a fictional story of NUMA finding the aircraft.[42] And in the 2018 novel Chance to Break[43] by Owen Prell, the protagonist muses about the fate of the French aviators and compares them to valiant athletes who are defeated in the arena of sports.
As of 2008, the landing gear (or, more accurately, "takeoff gear," since there was no intention to land on it) is the only confirmed part of the biplane remaining, and is on display at the
Specifications
General characteristics
- Crew: Two
- Length: 9.75 m (31 ft 11 in)
- Wingspan: 15 m (49 ft 0 in)
- Height: 3.89 m (12 ft 9 in)
- Wing area: 61.0 m2 (656 sq ft)
- Empty weight: 1,905 kg (4,200 lb)
- Gross weight: 5,000 kg (11,000 lb)
- Powerplant: 1 × Lorraine-Dietrich W-12ED , 340 kW (460 hp)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 193 km/h (120 mph, 100 kn)
- Cruise speed: 165 km/h (102 mph, 89 kn)
- Range: 7,000 km (4,350 mi, 3,780 nmi)
- Endurance: 40 hours
- Service ceiling: 7,000 m (22,965 ft)
See also
- Aviation history
- List of missing aircraft
- Transatlantic flight
Notes
References
Citations
- ^ Montague 1971, pp. 102, 132.
- ^ a b c d e f g Godspeed, Charles and Francois. "The Secret of The White Bird." aero-news.net, 9 May 2006. Retrieved: 16 January 2009.
- ^ Schneider, Keith. "Win fabulous prizes, all in the name of innovation." The New York Times, 12 November 2007.
- ^ Stoff 2000, pp. 24–25.
- ^ a b c "Nungesser & Coli disappear aboard The White Bird – May, 1927." Archived 30 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Transport, Republic of France, June 1984 via tighar.org. Retrieved: 18 January 2009.
- ^ a b c McDonaugh 1966, p. 27.
- ^ a b c d e O'Mara, Richard. "Surviving Amelia." The Sun, 10 January 1999.
- ^ a b "Curtain Call." Archived 21 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Tighar Tracks (TIGHAR), Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 1987. Retrieved: 17 January 2009.
- ISBN 9781472840691.
- ^ McDonaugh 1966, p. 29.
- ^ Jackson 2012, p. 239.
- ^ a b c d e f Wiggens, Bill. "Mystery of the White Bird." Air Classics, July 1999.
- ^ Mosley 2000, p. 102.
- ^ a b c "Project Midnight Ghost ." Archived 8 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine tighar.org, 2006. Retrieved: 18 January 2009.
- ^ McDonaugh 1966, p. 30.
- ^ Berg 1999, p. 105.
- ^ a b McDonough 1966, p. 31.
- ^ Boston Globe, 8 March 1987.
- ^ Will 2008, pp. 21–22.
- ^ New Hampshire Sunday News, 28 May 2006.
- ^ Mosley 2000, p. 86.
- ^ Wohl 2007, p. 10.
- ^ JSTOR 2710171.
- ^ a b Hansen, Gunnar. "The Unfinished Flight of the White Bird." Archived 30 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Yankee Magazine, June 1980. Retrieved: 18 January 2009.
- ^ "National Archives". 4 June 2013. Archived from the original on 1 June 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
- ^ Meridan Daily Journal June 9, 1927 -it is unknown if the wreckage was from the L'Oiseau Blanc or from the missing aircraft on Mansell James who had disappeared in 1919
- ^ "US National Archives". 4 June 2013. Archived from the original on 1 June 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
- ISBN 978-0-374-10675-1, page 257.
- ^ a b c d Laskey, Jane. "Uncovering ghosts." St. Cloud Times, 10 July 2007.
- ^ a b "The White Bird". Archived 25 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine NUMA. Retrieved: 16 January 2009.
- ^ "Bangor Daily News July 13, 1987". Archived from the original on 6 April 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
- ^ a b c d Heins, Catherine. "White Bird's trail fading – Many convinced trans-Atlantic flier made it to Maine." Bangor Daily News, 29 July 1998.
- ^ "Bangor Daily News Sept 11, 1986 p.8". Archived from the original on 6 April 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
- ^ Moffett, Sebastian. "Charles Lindbergh Won the Prize, but Did His Rival Get There First? A Countryman Tries to Unravel the Unsolved Mystery of Charles Nungesser's Last Flight." Archived 28 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Wall Street Journal, 6 September 2011.
- ^ Lagarde, Michel. "Étretat naturellement belle." (in French). Archived 4 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Office de Tourisme d'Etretat. Retrieved: 16 January 2009.
- Sunday Times, 22 September 2002.
- ^ "La vie aerienne: Deux grand departs, ont eu lieu ce matin pour le record d’endurance." (in French) Archived 23 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Journal des débats politiques et littéraires, 9 May 1928.
- ^ "Timbre Nungesser Coli" (in French). Archived 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine phil-ouest.com. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- ^ "St. Raphael Signature Site Strategy". Archived 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (Toronto, Ontario), 2007, p 14. Retrieved: 19 July 2011.
- ^ "Lost Aviators: New Lakes Named." Archived 13 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine The West Australian (Perth, Western Australia), 16 January 1928, p. 13. Retrieved: 19 July 2011.
- IMDb. Retrieved: 16 January 2009.
- IMDb. Retrieved: 16 January 2009.
- ISBN 1545619263.
Sources
- Berg, A. Scott. Lindbergh. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1999, First edition 1998. ISBN 978-0-42517-041-0.
- Jackson, Joe. Atlantic Fever: Lindbergh, His Competitors, and the Race to Cross the Atlantic. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. ISBN 978-0-37410-675-1.
- McDonaugh, Kenneth. Atlantic Wings 1919–1939: The Conquest of the North Atlantic by Aeroplane. Hemel Hempstead, Herts, UK: Model Aeronautical Press, 1966. ISBN 978-0-85344-125-0.
- Montague, Richard. Oceans, Poles and Airmen: The First Flights Over Wide Waters and Desolate Ice. New York: Random House, 1971. ISBN 978-0-39446-237-0.
- Mosley, Leonard. Lindbergh: A Biography (Dover Transportation). Mineola, NY: Courier Dover Publications, 2000. ISBN 978-0-48640-964-1.
- Stoff, Joshua. Transatlantic Flight: A Picture History, 1873–1939. Mineoloa, NY: Dover publications, Inc., 2000. ISBN 0-486-40727-6.
- Will, Gavin. The Big Hop: The North Atlantic Air Race. Portugal Cove-St. Phillips, Newfoundland: Boulder Publications, 2008. ISBN 978-0-9730271-8-1.
- Wohl, Robert. The Spectacle of Flight: Aviation and the Western Imagination, 1920–1950. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2007, First edition 2005. ISBN 978-0-30012-265-7.
External links
- L'Oiseau Blanc ("The White Bird"), check-six.com
- Picture of landing gear of L'Oiseau Blanc at the French Air and Space Museum
- French flying aces 'beat Charles Lindbergh's record' by Henry Samuel, telegraph.co.uk
- "Charles Lindbergh Won the Prize, but Did His Rival Get There First?" by Sebastian Moffett, Wall Street Journal