The Big Race of 1910
How the first U.S. air race launched an aviation tradition.
- By Don Berliner
- Air & Space magazine, January 2010
With Lincoln Beachey at the controls, a Curtiss design dashes past the crowd, but not fast enough to earn points from the judges.
NASM-9A03618~A
When Glenn Curtiss edged Frenchman Louis Blériot at the world's first air race, in Reims, France, in August 1909, few Americans had seen an airplane, let alone an air race. Curtiss won them the opportunity. By bringing home air racing's first important award—the Gordon Bennett Trophy—Curtiss also won the right for his country to host the next international air meet. And thus America got its first air race, held in the city of Los Angeles 100 years ago.
In October 1909, airship pilot Roy Knabenshue, from Toledo, Ohio, and Charles Willard, the first man Curtiss taught to fly, met and decided to use southern California as a winter base for their aerial demonstrations. They contacted Curtiss, thinking his fame would help draw crowds as big as those that attended the event in Reims. Curtiss agreed to the plan, though he had no intention of using the venue to defend the trophy; that race would be months away and held in New York, where he believed more money was to be made than in California. Knabenshue contacted Los Angeles promoter Dick Ferris, who in turn, got the Los Angeles Merchants and Manufacturers Association on board for financial support, and persuaded railroad magnate Henry Huntington to pledge $50,000. (For Huntington it was a no-brainer; his trains, after all, would haul spectators to the meet.)
"No one knew who would come," says Judson Grenier, a history professor retired from California State University at Dominguez Hills. "But there was a great economic optimism, with the city bringing in water [by funding a $23 million aqueduct] and getting a port [by annexing nearby San Pedro], both in August 1909. So the feeling was: If we can do that, we can do anything."
One of the first to see economic opportunity in air racing was newspaper owner William Randolph Hearst, who flogged the event in his Los Angeles Examiner, one of the city's four daily newspapers. Hearst, who had traveled down from San Francisco, arranged for a hot-air balloon to be tethered on the grounds during the meet. On the balloon's side were the words "It's all in the Examiner." And it was, including fashion tips for women spectators.
The races—along with demonstrations—took place at Dominguez Field, just south of Los Angeles, on land loaned by the family of Manuel Dominguez, from January 10 to 20. Workers had erected a grandstand capable of seating 26,000, and pitched large tents for the pilots to store and work on their airplanes. The advertised prize money was $70,000. Much of it was for specific tasks, such as $10,000 for a nonstop balloon flight to the Atlantic coast, which went unawarded. More realistic were the prizes for breaking major world records, although many of those too were never claimed. But all helped achieve the goal of bringing together some of the most skilled and daring pilots in the United States.
Skilled and daring pilots were not plentiful in 1910 America. Although 43 flying machines were officially entered, only 16 showed up, and not all of them flew. One five-wing "multi-plane" built by a local high school teacher, for example, participated only as a static display; it couldn't get off the ground.
Despite the nearly empty skies, the meet caused a sensation in Los Angeles. Fans clambered aboard Huntington's streetcars, which left the city for the field every two minutes. More than 20,000 packed the stands each day. To draw out-of-towners, the meet's executive committee, of which Ferris was a member, had cleverly arranged for each day to honor a different city: "San Diego Day," "San Francisco Day," and so on. Schools in the honored districts were closed on those days, so when it was Los Angeles' turn, a 13-year-old named Jimmy Doolittle (who himself became a famous race pilot, before gaining even more fame for leading a World War II bombing raid on Tokyo) got to see his first airplane.
"The city was turned on," says Grenier. "I don't think any other event has had that kind of effect of shutting down the city for two weeks. You had businesses closing, schools letting out, women's groups coming in en masse. Anybody who could walk, and some who couldn't, made it to the meet. Cars were pretty primitive then, with canvas tops, so only a very small number of people came in cars. Most of them rode the train, then walked the half-mile to the field. It was kind of the climax of boosterism that's so characteristic of Los Angeles."





Comments (5)
Thank you for a great article. This site is 2 miles west of our home, 4 miles off the end of the runway at Long Beach and we can see the antenna marking the location from our property. Two years ago, I formed "Wings over Long Beach" basing its mission on this local history and the history is prolific.
We have partnered with the Aero Club of Southern California, Cal State University at Dominguez Hills and the Rancho Adobe Museum for a year-long celebration, hopefully culminating in an airshow in nearby Long Beach on Nov. 14. We are members of the International Council of AirShows and last year we ran a successful Open House at Long Beach Airport celebrating Air Force Week - Los Angeles and the 85th Anniversary of the Airport.
I found myself in a unique position to contribute to this and am passionate to see it through. My maternal grandfather was in those grandstands on several days. Also, not mentioned in this story, Louis Paulhan flew on Day 5 to the Harbor and his is the first documented powered flight over the Pacific Ocean.
2010 is the Centennial and a one-time opportunity to be a part of history just a few miles from the original site. Interested sponsors and volunteers can reach us at info@wingsoverlongbeach.com. We will be cooperating with significant aviation organizations to ensure a great celebration.
Posted by Dennis Lord on December 16,2009 | 02:26 PM
Aviation has come a long way in a century... But come to think of it the general designs and body of aircraft haven't changed too much, with fuselage and wings. Now with craft like NASA's Blended Wing Body design, I wonder how far and in what directions aeronautics will go...
www.spairthoughts.blogspot.com
Posted by Brian on January 12,2010 | 09:19 PM
why is it that we dont hear much about philp orin parmelee he was the first taught to fly buy the wright bros he did a lot of firsts in flight. EDITORS' REPLY: We have a story that will be published shortly that mentions him. The trouble is, the farther back you go, the less documentation you can find on historic pilots and aircraft.
Posted by junior parmelee on January 19,2010 | 07:22 AM
Paulhan toured across the US on his way to LA for this race. He stopped here in Houston and made the first manned flight in Houston on February 18th, 1910.
We'll be making note of this event in the days to come! One Hundred Years of flight in Houston! Woo-hoo!
Posted by Michael Bludworth on February 2,2010 | 06:07 PM
Hi Don: I found your article very interesting, as I am trying to find information on Arch Hoxsey and his Aere-Auto race at the Illinois state fair 1910. I am in possession of the Illinois watch co. Aero-Auto Race trophy 1910. The reverse is engraved"won by Arch Hoxsey , Oct. 8th. I am looking for information on the presentation. Info or comments would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Doug
Posted by doug murray on October 21,2012 | 06:42 PM