Barnstorming was a form of entertainment in which stunt pilots performed tricks individually or in groups that were called flying circuses . Devised to "impress people with the skill of pilots and the sturdiness of planes," it became popular in the United States during the Roaring Twenties .
23-616: A Flying circus is a barnstorming troop (a flying exhibition team). Flying circus or Flying Circus may also refer to: Barnstorming Barnstormers were pilots who flew throughout the country to sell airplane rides and perform stunts. Charles Lindbergh first began flying as a barnstormer. Barnstorming was the first major form of civil aviation in the history of manned flight . The Wright brothers and Glenn Curtiss had early flying exhibition teams, with solo flyers like Lincoln Beachey and Didier Masson also popular before World War I , but barnstorming did not become
46-601: A base of operation, the pilot or group of aviators would "buzz" the village and drop flyers . In some towns the arrival of a barnstormer or an aerial troupe would lead to a town-wide shutdown as people attended the show. Barnstormers performed a variety of stunts, with some specializing as stunt pilots or aerialists. Stunt pilots performed a variety of aerobatic maneuvers , including spins, dives, loop-the-loops and barrel rolls . Meanwhile, aerialists performed feats of wing walking , stunt parachuting , midair plane transfers, or even playing tennis , target shooting, and dancing on
69-527: A formal phenomenon until the 1920s. The first barnstormer, taught to fly by Curtiss in 1909, was one Charles Foster Willard , who is also credited as the first to be shot down in an airplane when an annoyed farmer fired a squirrel gun and broke his propeller. During World War I, the United States manufactured a significant number of Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny" biplanes to train its military aviators , and almost every American airman learned to fly using
92-445: A ground vehicle, such as a car, a boat, or a train, to the plane. Other variations included free-falls ending with a last-minute parachute opening. Charles Lindbergh , whose career in flight began with wing walking, was well known for stunts involving parachutes. The first African-American woman granted an international pilot license, Bessie Coleman , also engaged in stunts using parachutes. Another successful woman in this profession
115-424: A handful of planes. Many of these were reliable and even advanced designs which suffered from the failure of the aviation market to expand as expected, and a number of these found their way into the only active markets—mail carrying, barnstorming, and smuggling. Sometimes a plane and its owner would drift between the three activities as opportunity presented. Combined with the lack of Federal Aviation Regulations at
138-467: A rash of highly publicized accidents led to new safety regulations, which led to the demise of barnstorming. Spurred by a perceived need to protect the public and in response to political pressure by local pilots upset at barnstormers stealing their customers, the federal government enacted laws to regulate a fledgling civil aviation sector. The laws included safety standards and specifications that were virtually impossible for barnstormers to meet, , such as
161-411: A relatively short period during the infancy of wing walking. Variations on wing walking became common, with such stunts as doing handstands, hanging by one's teeth, and transferring from one plane to another. A 1931 article on wing-walking on inverted aircraft touted the practical aspect of performing inflight landing-gear inspection or maintenance. Eventually wing walkers began making transfers between
184-533: A wing walker. The earliest known instance of standing on the wing of a powered aircraft was an experimental flight in England involving a biplane built by Colonel Samuel Franklin Cody on 14 January 1911. At Laffan's Plain, Cody took his two stepsons for a flight, with them standing on the lower wing. In August 1913, Commandant Felix locked the controls of his "Nieuport-Dunne" biplane over France and climbed out along
207-403: Is the act of moving along the wings of an aeroplane (most commonly a biplane ) during flight, sometimes transferring between planes. It originated as a daredevil stunt in the aerial barnstorming shows of the 1920s, and became the subject of several Hollywood movies. An early exponent was Ormer Locklear , who was killed performing a dive on film. Charles Lindbergh began his aviation career as
230-738: The Gates Flying Circus folded. In 1936, the practice effectively ended in the United States when the U.S. government banned wing walking below 1,500 feet (460 m). People had difficulty seeing stunts above that height. In the 1970s, stunt men and women had restrictions that included being attached to the upper wing center section. Wing walking continues to be practiced by various performers. On November 14, 1981, in an event organized by Martin Caidin, nineteen skydivers set an unofficial wing-walking world record by standing on
253-617: The Jazz Age in the United States allowed barnstormers to publicize aviation and eventually contributed to bringing about regulation and control. In 1925, the U.S. government began regulating aviation , when it passed the Contract Air Mail Act, which allowed the U.S. Post Office to hire private airlines to deliver mail with payments made based on the weight of the mail. The following year, President Calvin Coolidge signed
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#1732773244548276-620: The Marie Meyer Flying Circus and others, making a marginal living; Errold Bahl hired him as an assistant, and as a promotional stunt, Lindbergh "volunteered to climb out onto the wing and wave to the crowds below," a performance known as " wing walking ." During a barnstorming tour in Minnesota and Wisconsin in 1923, he made the "decision to pursue further formal instruction with the U.S. Army Air Service ." The sensational journalism and economic prosperity that marked
299-556: The Air Commerce Act, which shifted the management of air routes to a new branch in the Department of Commerce , which was also responsible for "licensing of planes and pilots, establishing safety regulations, and general promotion." Barnstorming "seemed to be founded on bravado, with 'one-upmanship' a major incentive." By 1927, competition among barnstormers resulted in their performing increasingly dangerous tricks, and
322-774: The Flying Aces Air Circus, the 13 Black Cats , Mabel Cody’s Flying Circus, the Inman Brothers Flying Circus, and the Marie Meyer Flying Circus . Perhaps the largest and most successful of these was the Gates Flying Circus , which attracted in its heyday tens of thousands to a single show. A Time magazine article estimated it staged 2000 air meets in 44 states. Barnstorming was performed not only by former military men, but also by women, minorities, and minority women. For example, on July 18, 1915, Katherine Stinson became
345-472: The country giving rides as late as fall 1941. "Barnstorming season" ran from early spring until after the harvest and county fairs in the fall. Most barnstorming shows started with a pilot, or team of pilots flying over a small rural town to attract local attention. They would then land at a local farm (hence the term "barnstorming") and negotiate for the use of a field as a temporary runway from which to stage an air show and offer airplane rides. After obtaining
368-460: The first woman in the world to perform a loop. Bessie Coleman , an African-American woman, "not only thrilled audiences with her skills as a barnstormer, but she also became a role model for women and African Americans. Her very presence in the air threatened prevailing contemporary stereotypes. She also fought segregation when she could by using her influence as a celebrity." Charles Lindbergh engaged in barnstorming in his early years, with
391-456: The lower wing, leaving the plane to fly itself. An early wing walker who performed daring stunts was American Ormer Locklear . In November 1918, Locklear performed at Barron Field, Texas, with the first public performance of his daredevil wing-walking stunts. Wing walking was seen as an extreme form of barnstorming , and wing walkers would regularly take up the challenge of outdoing one another. They admitted (or rather proclaimed proudly) that
414-520: The minimum altitude at which certain tricks could be performed (making it harder for spectators to see what was happening). The military also stopped selling Jennys in the late 1920s. This made it too difficult for barnstormers to make a living. Clyde Pangborn , who was the pilot of the two-man aviation team who were the first to cross the Pacific Ocean nonstop in 1931, ended his barnstorming career in 1931. Some pilots, however, continued to wander
437-641: The plane's wings. Other stunts included nose dives and flying through barns, which sometimes led to pilots crashing their planes. Barnstormers offered plane rides for a small fee. Lindbergh, for example, charged five dollars for a 15-minute ride in his plane. However exciting and glamorous, it was not an easy way to make a steady living. To make ends meet, the barnstormers—including Charles Lindbergh—often had to moonlight as flying instructors, handymen, gas station attendants, etc. Barnstormers often traded plane rides for room and board, both for commercial lodging and in private homes. Wing walking Wing walking
460-599: The plane. After the war the U.S. federal government sold off the surplus material, including the Jennys, for a fraction of their initial value (they had cost the government $ 5,000 each, but were being sold for as low as $ 200). This allowed many servicemen who already knew how to fly the JN-4s to purchase their own planes. The similar-looking Standard J -1 biplane was also available. At the same time, numerous aircraft manufacturing companies sprang up, most failing after building only
483-492: The point of their trade was to make money on the audience's prospect of seeing someone risk death. Among the many aerialists to become popular were Tiny Broderick, Gladys Ingle , Eddie Angel, Virginia Angel, Mayme Carson, Clyde Pangborn , Lillian Boyer , Jack Shack, Al Wilson, Fronty Nichols, Spider Matlock , Gladys Roy , Ivan Unger, Jessie Woods, Bonnie Rowe, Charles Lindbergh, and Mabel Cody (niece of Buffalo Bill Cody, no relation to S.F. Cody). Eight wing walkers died in
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#1732773244548506-503: The time, these factors allowed barnstorming to flourish. Although barnstormers often worked alone or in very small teams, some also organized large "flying circuses" with multiple planes and stunt people. These acts employed promoters to book shows in towns ahead of time. They were the largest and most organized of all of the barnstorming acts. Well-known circuses included the Five Blackbirds (an African American flying group),
529-409: Was Lillian Boyer , who performed hundreds of wing-walking exhibitions, automobile-to-plane changes, and parachute jumps. Eighteen-year-old Elrey Borge Jeppesen , known today for having developed air navigation manuals and charts, joined Tex Rankin 's Flying Circus around 1925; one of his jobs was wing walking. When the stock market crash of 1929 occurred, many prominent flying circuses such as
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