The Magical History Tour
Why are so many Golden Age airplanes traveling the country together this fall?
- By Mary Collins
- Air & Space magazine, September 2003
By 1927, airplanes were a national craze. At the original tour’s stop in Boston, crowds gathered for a closer look at the Ford 4-AT Tri-motor.
NASM (SI Neg. #93-16120)
(Page 5 of 10)
It’s first-person accounts like hers that bring back the innocence, energy, and fun of the era, during the administrations of Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover, when nearly half of Americans lived on farms, and men with an idea and some cash could design their own airplanes.
After winning the 1929 tour in a Waco 225, John Livingston wrote a day-by-day account of his three-week adventure for Aviation. “While the total number of hours I have in the air is not excessive,” Livingston wrote, “much of my experience has been in virgin cross-country work. As a result, I think that perhaps I have developed a knack of recognizing little things that help me stay on course.”
The original tours focused on manufacturing towns, rather than big cities like New York or San Francisco, so there was a small-scale quirkiness to the whole escapade. In 1928, the city of Wausau, Wisconsin, population 18,000, offered $1,200 and the honorary title “Air Mayor of Wausau” to the pilot voted into office by the Wausau citizenry. The manager of the town airfield, John Wood, was competing in a Waco 10, painted with the Baby Ruth candy bar insignia. He attached parachutes to small candy bars and dropped them over the side of his aircraft to the crowds. He became the hometown hero, and new Air Mayor of Wausau, when he won the tour. But in a pattern all too common for pilots at the time, he died the following year over the California desert when lightning hit his Lockheed Vega. Wausau (current population 40,000), which named a street near the airport after Wood, will be one of the stops on the 2003 tour.
Greg Herrick can’t get enough of these stories. To him, all of the Wacos, Stinsons, Ryans, Fairchilds, Birds, Cabinaires, Stearmans, Travel Airs, and Sikorskys that flew in the tours represented a creative flash in the commercial aviation industry that disappeared with the rise of long production lines at the advent of World War II.
“Everyone is into warbirds, which is just great, but, frankly, the world doesn’t really need another [restored] P-51,” he says.
“I figured if I was going to put in all this time and money I wanted something unique,” says Andrew King of Elwood, Virginia, who plans to fly his 1926 Ryan M-1. “It’s a monoplane from a time when almost all of the planes were biplanes. It was used on airmail routes a lot between Los Angeles and Seattle.”
Addison Pemberton of Spokane, Washington, also has an affinity for the airmail carriers. In 1993 he decided to re-fly the San Francisco-to-Chicago run in his Stearman 4E Speedmail with his buddy Ben Scott, another pilot who will fly in the September tour.
“We were sworn in as airmail pilots and carried 3,000 letters. I had my two boys with me—they were small at the time—we had airmail bags and everything.”
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next »





Comments (2)
Greg Herrick, Addison Pemberton, Larry Tobin, their families and too many good friends to list are doing more for aviation history than any other group in history. They work quietly, spending money and time, until the day another rare airplane rolls out into the sunshine and the blue smoke from an engine-start puffs into the sky. Two generations of young men and women get a chance to see these aircraft fly again, and hear the rare engine bark. Yes, they take all the chances of an accident with terrible loss, but what they give us is priceless, and I thank them for it.
Posted by Bette Bach Fineman on September 12,2008 | 02:11 PM
I'd like to note that the Dick Blythe referred to in this article was not a reporter, he was an aviator and publicist. Richard Reginald Blythe was a Canadian WWI veteran aviator. In WWI he served in the Royal Flying Corps, the precursor of the RAF. Post-war he was a founding member of the Quiet Birdmen and ran a public relations firm in NYC with fellow Royal Flying Service veteran, Harry S. Bruno, an American volunteer. The firm represented the Wright Aeronautical Company and Charles Lindbergh before and after his historic Trans-Atlantic crossing.
It has been written that he bought the sandwiches Lindbergh brought with him as provisions for his crossing. He was dispatched to Europe by WAC to accompany Lindbergh home on the USS Memphis. It has been said he counselled Lindbergh to wear a business suit and not a uniform to his ceremony so as to appear an every-man that all Americans can relate to.
During the Second World War, he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force and once again served his nation. He was a flight instructor under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan, assigned to No.6 Service Training Flying School in Dunville, Ontario training pilots from across the British Commonwealth.
On May 1st, 1941 he was killed in an accident. His North American T-6 Texan/Harvard trainer suffered an in-flight engine fire forcing him to attempt to bail out. He did not survive. He laid down his life in the service of his nation and for the love flight.
RIP Sgt. Richard Reginald Blythe
Feb 8, 1898 - May 1, 1941
Lest We Forget
Posted by Jon Blythe on March 2,2012 | 06:23 AM