1925 in aviation explained
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1925.
Events
January
February
March
April
- April
- April 13 - The first scheduled air freight service begins in the United States.
- April 15 - Ukvozdukhput/Ukrainian Airways begins services in Ukraine.[7]
- April 21 – Italian aviator Francesco de Pinedo and his mechanic Ernesto Campanelli depart Rome on a 201-day flight in the SIAI S.16ter flying boat Gennariello that will take them to Australia and Japan before they return to Rome in November.[8] [9]
May
- May 1 - The Imperial Japanese Army Air Corps is established under the command of Lieutenant General Kinichi Yasumitsu. It has 3,700 personnel and about 500 aircraft.[10]
- May 4 – Italian legislation sets the peacetime strength of the Regia Aeronautica (Italian Royal Air Force) at 182 squadrons, with 78 of them assigned directly to the air force, 69 to the Italian Royal Army, and 35 to the Regia Marina (Italian Royal Navy). The army and navy are given temporary command of the squadrons assigned to them for the length of time it takes to train them for wartime operations.[11]
June
July
- July 1 – The United States Post Office Department inaugurates 24-hour transcontinental air mail service. Previously, mailplanes had not flown at night and trains had carried the mail during the hours of darkness, but the completion of a coast-to-coast system of lighted beacons has allowed night flying to become practical along the entire route. The day-and-night flying allows the transcontinental air mail service to deliver mail notably faster than train-only service for the first time.[13]
- July 13 - Western Air Express, the future Western Airlines, is founded. It will begin flight operations in April 1926.
- July 16 – Italian aviator Francesco de Pinedo and his mechanic Ernesto Campanelli resume their flight from Italy to East Asia and the Western Pacific, flying from Melbourne to Sydney, Australia, in the SIAI S.16ter flying boat Gennariello after a 36-day stay in Melbourne. They had left Rome 86 days earlier and made 28 intermediate stops before arriving in Sydney. They will remain in Sydney for 21 days before continuing their journey through Australia and to Japan.[8]
August
- The Italian government's Commission for Aeronautics is replaced by a new Ministry of Aeronautics. The Regia Aeronautica (Royal Air Force), formerly subordinate to the commission, is subordinated to the new ministry.[14]
- August 6 – Italian aviator Francesco de Pinedo and his mechanic Ernesto Campanelli resume their flight from Italy to East Asia and the Western Pacific, departing Sydney, Australia, in the SIAI S.16ter flying boat Gennariello on their way to Tokyo.[8]
- August 7–9 – Flying in France on the route Chartres–Étampes–Toussus-le-Noble–Chartres, the French aviators Jules Landry and Maurice Drouhin set a closed-circuit distance record of 4400abbr=offNaNabbr=off in 45 hours 11 minutes 59 seconds in a Farman F.62.
- August 31 – U.S. Navy Commander John Rodgers and his crew take off from San Francisco, California in a PN-9 flying boat in an attempt to make the first transpacific flight from North America to the Hawaiian Islands. They are forced down in the Pacific Ocean on September 1 after flying 1,841.12 statute miles (2,964.77 km) nonstop. The four then sail the aircraft as a boat 450nmi farther toward Hawaii before being picked up by the U.S. Navy submarine 10nmi north of Kauai on September 10. Although unsuccessful, their flight sets a world nonstop distance record for Class C seaplanes which will stand until 1930.[15]
September
- The Czechoslovakian Avia BH-21R racer wins the Czechoslovakian national air races, covering the 200km (100miles) course at an average speed of 300.59km/h.[3]
- September 1 - After modifications, the aircraft carrier returns to service with the Royal Navy as the first ship ever to be equipped with a round-down[16] Located at the after end of her flight deck, the round-down, which improves air flow and gives pilots landing aboard Furious greater confidence, will become standard on aircraft carriers.[16]
- September 2 - The U.S. Navy dirigible breaks up in a storm and crashes near Caldwell, Ohio, killing 14 of her crew. Twenty-nine crew members survive.
- September 3 - The Spanish Navy aviation ship Dédalo, the only ship ever built capable of operating airships, balloons, and seaplanes, accompanies a Spanish fleet to Morocco to participate in the Rif War. Her aircraft and one of the airships she operates support the Spanish campaign to capture Ajir, which falls on October 2. She is the only European aviation ship to see combat between the end of the Russian Civil War and the beginning of World War II.[17]
- September 15 – The Bolivian airline Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano is founded.
- September 23 - The Bolivian airline Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano begins flight operations, flying a Junkers F.13 which takes off from Cochabamba, Bolivia.
- September 26 – Italian aviator Francesco de Pinedo and his mechanic Ernesto Campanelli arrive in Tokyo in the SIAI S.16ter flying boat Gennariello after a 58-day flight from Sydney, Australia, during which they have made 19 intermediate stops. They had departed Rome 158 days earlier and made 48 intermediate stops, including lengthy stays in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia, on their way to Tokyo, all without an engine change or any serious mishaps.[8]
October
November
- In mid-month, Farman Aviation Works test pilot Louis Bossoutrot sets several load-related world aviation records in the prototype of the Farman F.140 Super Goliath, reaching an altitude of 4990abbr=offNaNabbr=off with a useful load of 2000kg (4,000lb), an altitude of 3586abbr=offNaNabbr=off with a useful load of 5000kg (11,000lb) and a flight duration of 1 hour 12 minutes 21 seconds, and an altitude of 2000abbr=offNaNabbr=off with a greatest useful load of 6000kg (13,000lb).
- November 7 – Italian aviator Francesco de Pinedo and his mechanic Ernesto Campanelli return to Rome, completing a 201-day flight covering around 35000abbr=offNaNabbr=off in the SIAI S.16ter flying boat Gennariello. Departing Rome on April 21, their outbound route had taken to them to Brindisi in Italy; Leros in Greece; Baghdad in Iraq; Bushehr and Chabar in Persia; Karachi, Bombay, Cocanada, and Calcutta in British India; Akyab, Rangoon, Tavoy, and Mergui in Burma; Phuket in Siam; Penang in British Malaya; Singapore; Batavia, Surabaya, Sumbawa, and Kupang in the Netherlands East Indies, and Broome, Carnarvon, Perth, Bunbury, Albany, Israelite Bay, Adelaide, and Melbourne, Australia, where they had arrived on June 10 and spent just over five weeks before proceeding to Sydney, where they had arrived on July 16 and spent another three weeks. Resuming their flight on August 6, they had visited Brisbane, Rockhampton, Townsville, Innisfail, and Cooktown, and Thursday Island, Australia; Merauke, Dobo, Amboina, and Menado in the Netherlands East Indies; Cebu, Atimonan, Manila, and Aparri in the Philippines; Tamsui on Formosa; Shanghai in China; Mokpo in Korea; and Yamakawa and Kagoshima, Japan, before arriving in Tokyo on September 26. After a three-week stay there, they had begun their return journey on October 17, a 15,000-mile (24,155-kilometer) trip that they make in only 22 days, with stops at Kagoshima; Shanghai; Hong Kong; Haiphong and Saigon in French Indochina; Bangkok in Siam; Rangoon; Calcutta, Benares, Delhi, and Karachi in British India; Bandar Abbas in Persia; Baghdad; Alexandretta in Turkey; and Taranto in Italy before arriving in Rome. The entire journey, made without special preparations for support at any of the stops and involving two long flights – of 600miles1200miles – across the dry land of the Indian Subcontinent in a non-amphibious flying boat, proceeds without major incident and requires only one engine change, carried out at Tokyo. Flight describes the journey as "the most extensive aerial tour on record."[8] [9]
- November 20 - Germany holds a state funeral in Berlin for fighter pilot Manfred von Richthofen, the top-scoring ace of World War I with 80 aerial victories. He had been shot down and killed on 21 April 1918.[22]
First flights
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
November
- November 9 - Fairey Firefly (biplane)
- November 26 - Tupolev TB-1
December
Entered service
January
May
August
December
Retirements
Births
- March 20 – David Warren, Australian aviation scientist, inventor of the cockpit voice recorder (d. 2010)
Notes and References
- Auxiliary Air Force . 876 . XVII . 663–664 . . 8 October 1925 . 24 April 2015.
- Book: Angelucci, Enzo. The American Fighter: The Definitive Guide to American Fighter Aircraft From 1917 to the Present. New York. Orion Books. 1987. 978-0-517-56588-9.
- Book: Donald. David. The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. New York. Barnes & Noble Books. 1997. 0-7607-0592-5.
- Book: Daniel. Clifton. Chronicle of the 20th Century. registration. Mount Kisco. Chronicle Publications. 1987. 0-942191-01-3. 322.
- Web site: Founding. www.deltamuseum.org. 2019-10-02.
- Book: Robertson, Patrick. Film Facts. London. Aurum. 2001. 978-1-85410-654-4.
- Web site: 2023-10-05 . Aeroflot Airline Safety, Fleet Size & Destinations Britannica . 2023-11-13 . www.britannica.com . en.
- Italian Flight to Tokyo Accomplished. Flight. 1 October 1925. 644.
- Rome-Tokyo-Rome: Marquis de Pinedo's Grand Air Tour Successfully Concluded. Flight. 12 November 1925. 756.
- Book: Francillon, René J.. Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War. Annapolis. Naval Institute Press. 1979. 978-0-87021-313-7. 30.
- Gooch, John, Mussolini and His Generals: The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy, 1922-1940, Cambridge, U.K: Cambridge University Press, 2007,, p. 58.
- Web site: A Chronological History of Coast Guard Aviation: The Early Years, 1915-1938 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121012012530/http://www.uscg.mil/history/webaircraft/CGAviationHistory1916_1938.pdf . dead . 2012-10-12 .
- Jensen, Richard, "The Suicide Club," Aviation History, May 2017, pp. 63, 64, 65.
- Gardiner, Robert, ed., Conway′s All the World′s Fighting Ships 1906-1921, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1985,, p. 252.
- Web site: Aviation Hawaii: 1920-1929 Chronology of Aviation in Hawaii.
- Book: Sturtivant, Ray. British Naval Aviation: The Fleet Air Arm, 1917-1990. registration. Annapolis. Naval Institute Press. 1990. 0-87021-026-2.
- Book: Layman, R. D.. Before the Aircraft Carrier: The Development of Aviation Vessels 1849-1922. Annapolis. 1989. 978-0-87021-210-9.
- Book: Thetford, Owen. British Naval Aircraft Since 1912. Sixth. Annapolis. Naval Institute Press. 1991. 1-55750-076-2. 123.
- Air Accidents in the Fog . 17 October 1925 . 12 . 44095 . D.
- Web site: Aviation Safety Network: Accident Description.
- Web site: Famous People Who Died in Aviation Accidents: 1920s. planecrashinfo.com. 2015-12-22. 2015-12-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20151211033839/http://planecrashinfo.com/famous1920s.htm. dead.
- Book: Kilduff, Peter. The Red Baron: Beyond the Legend. London. Cassell. 1994. 0-304-35207-1. 161.
- Book: Mondey. David. The Complete Illustrated History of the Worlds Aircraft. Secaucus. Chartwell Books, Inc.. 1978. 0-89009-771-2. 30.
- Web site: Handley Page Hyderabad and Hinaidi. rafmuseum.org.uk.