Albert Leo Stevens | |
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Stevens ascent from Wanamaker's in Manhattan on July 8, 1911
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Born |
Cleveland, Ohio |
March 9, 1877
Died | May 8, 1944 Bardonia, New York |
(aged 67)
Spouse(s) | Julia Laura |
Relatives | Frank Stevens (?-1958), brother |
Albert Leo Stevens (March 9, 1877 – May 8, 1944) was a pioneering balloonist.
He was born on March 9, 1873 or 1877 in Cleveland, Ohio of Czech parentage. He had brother Frank Stevens (1875–1958).
He began making balloon ascensions in 1889 at age 12, and began manufacturing balloons and dirigibles at the age of 20 in 1893. In 1895 he made his first parachute jump from a church spire in Montreal, Canada.
He participated in the Gordon Bennett Balloon Races. He flew one of the very first dirigibles in the United States in 1906.
He opened the first private airfield in the nation in 1909. Stevens also played a key role in the development of safety features for parachutes.
On July 8, 1911 he ascended in a balloon from the Wanamaker's store in New York City heading toward Philadelphia, but he landed in West Nyack, New York.
During World War I he was a US Army instructor.
He died on May 8, 1944 at age 67.
There is the Leo Stevens Award. The National Air and Space Museum houses the Leo Stevens Glass Plate Photography Collection, 1900-1915.