Alberto Santos-Dumont flew into the records book on 23rd October, 1906 when he flew his 14-bis plane at Bagatelle, near Paris, for over 200 feet at an altitude of about 10 feet. This was the first officially recognized heavier-than-air flight in Europe and earned him the first of the aviation prizes, 3,000 francs for a 25-meter-or-greater flight.
Alberto Santos-Dumont was born on July 20, 1873 and died on July 23, 1932
On 12th November, 1906 Santos-Dumont flew 700 feet at an altitude of almost 13 feet thus qualifying for the second aviation prize offered for heavier-than-air-aircraft, 1,000 francs for a flight of 100 meters or more.
Brazilian stamp issued in 1929 shows the 14-bis and the date of 12 November 1906.
Set of 4 stamps issued by Brazil on the 50th anniversary of Alberto Santos Dumont's 14-bis
Stamps issued by Uruguay for the 50th Anniversary of Santos-Dumont's 1906 flight
First in the Air, first on the Moon. Brazil marked the Moon Landing in 1969 with this stamp showing Santos-Dumont's aviation achievement vis a vis the
Landing on the Moon
Landing on the Moon
Wallis & Futuna Islands issued this stamp to mark the birth centenary of Santos-Dumont. The stamp shows his airship also the 14-bis.
French stamp issed to mark Santos-Dumont's birth centenary shows the progress of his aviation exploits from Balloons to Airships to dirigibles to heavier-than-air aircraft.
This stamp issued by SanMarino shows the Demoiselle monoplane, the last plane Santos-Dumont designed. He used this as his personal transportation. It could attain speed of over 100 km/hr
Stamps issued by Brazil to commemorate Santos-Dumont birth centenary
2 comments:
Rudy, great piece.. I so enjoy your writings..
Best wishes Michael
http://cddstamps.wordpress.com/
thanks for this nice post
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