AEA Silver Dart | |
---|---|
The AEA Silver Dart in flight. | |
Role | Pioneer Era aircraft |
Manufacturer | Aerial Experiment Association |
Designer |
John McCurdy Frederick W. "Casey" Baldwin Glenn Curtiss Thomas Selfridge Alexander Graham Bell |
First flight | 23 February 1909 |
Status | Destroyed in crash |
Primary user | Aerial Experiment Association |
Produced | 1908 |
Number built | 1 |
Coordinates: 46°07′06″N 60°43′01″W / 46.1184°N 60.7169°W
The Silver Dart (or Aerodrome #4) was a derivative of an early aircraft built by a Canadian/U.S. team, which after many successful flights in Hammondsport, New York, earlier in 1908, was dismantled and shipped to Baddeck, Nova Scotia. It was flown off the ice of Baddeck Bay, a sub-basin of Bras d'Or Lake, on 23 February 1909, making it the first controlled powered flight in Canada. The aircraft was piloted by one of its designers, John McCurdy. The original Silver Dart was designed and built by the Aerial Experiment Association (AEA), formed under the guidance of Dr. Alexander Graham Bell.
From 1891, Bell had begun experiments at Baddeck and Hammondsport to develop motor-powered heavier-than-air aircraft. By 1908, the success of the AEA was seen in a series of ground-breaking designs, culminating in the Silver Dart. By the time the Silver Dart was constructed in late 1908, it was the Aerial Experiment Association's fourth flying machine. One of its precursors, the June Bug, had already broken records. It won the Scientific American Trophy for making the first official one mile (1609 m) flight in North America.