
|
THE 456th FIGHTER INTERCEPTOR SQUADRON |
|
THE PROTECTORS OF S. A. C. |
|
|
|
The Chanute & Mouillard Correspondence |
+ Larger Font | - Smaller Font
April 16, 1890 to May 20, 1897
Being the letters exchanged between Octave Chanute, American engineer, and Louis-Pierre Mouillard, French author and student of bird flight, mainly on the subject of aeronautics.
Translated into English by Eugene Moritz (1878-1946) of New York City and Dr. M. Louise Kraus (1893-1961) of Leudelange, Luxembourg. Edited by Juliette Bevo-Higgins of Pottsville, Pennsylvania.
The work was undertaken at the request of Pearl I. Young of 1262 Lititz Pike, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, who has authorized E. L. Sterne, aeronautical bookseller, of 2949 Balboa Street, San Francisco, California, to sell the only 12 copies available.
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 1962
Preface
These translations of the correspondence between Octave Chanute and Louis-Pierre Mouillard are not intended for highly technical usage. For such a purpose the letter-press copies of Chanute's letters and the original Mouillard replies should be consulted. They are in the manuscript division of the Library of Congress.
Shortly after the death of Chanute in November 1910, his daughters were approached by a member of the French Ligue Nationale Aerienne, who borrowed from them the letters Mouillard had written to their father, on the excuse that the Ligue wished to see that Chanute got due credit for the aid he had given Frenchmen on aeronautics. A list of the letters by date was retained but no copies were made. The letters were not returned as promised.
Only years of effort by French engineers and lawyers produced the return of the letters that are produced in this volume. From the dates kept of the letters listed here as "Missing" and from Chanute's replies it is clear that the retained letters contained details of proposed inventions. Their retention in France was apparently intended to forestall any denial of the ridiculous charges made by a few chauvinistic Frenchmen to the effect that Chanute had made a dupe of Mouillard and stolen his ideas so that an American, not a Frenchman, would be the first to fly. A copy of one of the retained letters dated December 10, 1891 was available from the S. P. Langley correspondence. Chanute had sent him a copy because in it Mouillard gave Chanute permission to share everything with Langley.
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, October 20, 1962 Pearl I. Young
1892 Correspondence 1893 Correspondence 1894 Correspondence 1895 Correspondence 1896 and early 1897 Correspondence Appendix http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/search.html
|
Last Updated |
|
09/21/2009 |
|
POWERED BY |
|
456FIS.ORG |
