Drilldown: Publications
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Choose a table:
- Airplane (18)
- Airship (15)
- Companies (468)
- Event (141)
- Letters (683)
- Location (68)
- Organizations (938)
- Patents (15753)
- Person (2240)
- Publications (24939)
- Techtypes (2427)
Use the filters below to narrow your results.
Authors:
None (218) ·
Henry Woodhouse (54) ·
Jacques Mortane (11) ·
US Department of the Navy (10) ·
H. M. Du Bois (9) ·
Henry Alexander Wise Wood (9) ·
Alan R. Hawley (8) ·
Sidney H. Hollands (8) ·
Grover Cleveland Loening (7) ·
Aero Club of America (7) ·
Edward S. Moffat (5) ·
Rodman Wanamaker (5) ·
G. Lacy Hillier (5) ·
George F. Campbell Wood (5) ·
Roland Garros (4) ·
James Allen (4)
Keywords:
Showing below up to 250 results in range #1 to #250.
View (previous 250 | next 250) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)
A
- Adrianople, 1913, The part the aeroplane played in bringing about the fall of Adrianople. How it saved life and money
- Aero Club of America, 1913, The Aero Club of America trophy for 1913. Awarded to Glenn H. Curtiss for the development and demonstration of the flying boat
- Aero Club of America, 1914, Committees for the year 1914
- Aero Club of America, 1914, The eighth annual banquet of the Aero Club of America
- Aero Club of America, 1915, To popularize aeronautics in America; movement started at Aero Club of America's banquet
- Aero Club of America, 1916, Aero Club mobilizes artists for defense
- Aero Club of America, 1916, Constructive program of Aero Club of America announced
- Aero Club of America, 1916, Tenth annual banquet of the Aero Club of America, held at the Hotel Biltmore, New York, January 12, 1916
- Aerodynamical Laboratory Commission, 1913, Report of the Aerodynamical Laboratory Commission
- Aeronautical Society of Great Britain, Technical terms committee, 1915, Aeronautical technical terms defined by the Technical terms committee of the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain
- Alexander, 1916, Insurance against war surprise by aeroplanes
- Allen, 1913, New requirements for scout type military aeroplane
- Allen, 1913, Report on military aeronautics of Brigadier General James Allen, Chief Signal Officer, U. S. A., to the Secretary of War
- Amundsen, 1913, Amundsen orders two flying boats
- Amundsen, 1917, Captain Amundsen and Captain Bartlett to use aeroplanes in their expeditions into the North Polar Ocean
- Arnold, 1916, Elected member of Naval Consulting Board representing the American Society of Aeronautic Engineers
- Astor, 1915, Vincent Astor's seaplane
B
- Bacon, 1903, The balloon in modern warfare
- Baker, 1916, Secretary Baker asks for $1,076,000 for National Guard aeronautics
- Baker, 1916, Secretary Baker declines offer of aeroplanes
- Barra, 1912, The future of hydroaeroplanes
- Barton, 1903, The safety of airships
- Beachey, 1915, Lincoln Beachey
- Beck, 1912, Military aviation in America: its needs
- Benjamin, 1915, The Fiske torpedo-launching seaplane. A new and terrible form of attack on the high seas or in harbors
- Berson; Süring, 1902, The highest altitude
- Besnard, 1912, The construction of aeroplanes
- Blanchard, 1902, Air flapping machines and personal flight
- Blanchard, 1903, Air flapping machines and personal flight
- Blériot, 1913, Apropos of looping the loop with aeroplane
- Brant, 1913, Our war with Germany
- Bronson, 1914, A human albatross
- Bronson, 1914, Aviation a time saver - some new fields it is certain to conquer
- Bronson, 1914, Navigation - Biggest problem in cross-Atlantic flight
- Bruce, 1901, Scientific aspects of M. Santos-Dumont's experiments
- Bruce, 1914, The balloon and automobile chase
- Burt, 1915, Aeronautics will develop a broader vision
- Butler, 1902, Balloon ascent from Paris in a snowstorm
C
- Carlstrom, 1916, Carlstrom flies 661 miles in 8 hours 41 minutes for Curtiss marine flying trophy
- Castro, 1916, The war in the air
- Chambers, 1912, Aviation to-day and the importance of a national aerodynamic laboratory
- Chambers, 1912, Launching aeroplanes by catapult
- Chambers, 1913, Aviation to-day and development in the United States Navy
- Chambers, 1913, Hydroaviation in the United States: the need for an aeroplane and hydraero-plane competition
- Clark, 1915, Compromise in the design of a military aeroplane
- Cody, 1913, The death of Colonel Samuel F. Cody
- Coffin, 1916, Laying the corner stone for a great industry
- Coffyn, 1913, The Burgess coast defense hydro and the Sturtevant motor
- Collins, 1913, Model aeroplanes
- Coull, 1915, The fuel problem
- Cronin, 1913, Aero mail service for Alaska
- Curtiss, 1913, The popularity of water flying in America
- Curtiss, 1913, Three years of water flying
- Curtiss, 1915, Mr. Glenn H. Curtiss offers $10,000 trophy for army and navy competition
D
- D'Orcy, 1914, Present status of naval aviation in Europe
- D'Orcy, 1915, Italy's air fleet
- D'Orcy, 1916, The war in the air
- Davidson, 1915, The Goodyear military kite balloon
- Davis, 1916, Scouting flights and the defense of isolated naval bases
- Delano, 1912, The Hempstead Plains aerodrome: Official field of the Aero Club of America
- Delano, 1913, Suggestions for a volunteer aviation corps for state military use
- Dickinson, Witmer, and Woodhouse, 1915, Aeroplanes would have saved the Lusitania
- Dietzsch, 1913, The Benz aeromotor
- Dodge, 1916, Earl W. Dodge's aviation training camp in action
- Du Bois, 1913, Some sportsmen who use flying boats
- Du Bois, 1913, The Times aerial derby around Manhattan
- Du Bois, 1914, Burgess-Dunne seaplane officially tested
- Du Bois, 1914, The Burgess-Dunne hydroaeroplane
- Du Bois, 1914, The Gordon Bennett aviation cup races
- Du Bois, 1914, The Langley aerodrome flown
- Du Bois, 1914, The New York Fourth of July aviation race
- Du Bois, 1915, Hunting wild game from an aeroplane
- Du Bois, 1915, The Curtiss marine flying trophy
- Dudley, 1916, Aeroplanes for Coast Guard
- Dunn, 1915, The National defenses
E
F
- Felix, 1913, The remarkable Dunne aeroplane
- Field, 1903, Recent disasters and the factor of safety
- Fiske, 1916, Rear Admiral Fiske urges development of naval aeronautics
- Fletcher, 1915, The aeronautical needs of the navy
- Fraser, 1912, Observations on the flight of the herring gull. A nature study in aviation
G
- Garros, 1913, From Cannes, across the Mediterranean sea, to Tunis
- Garros, 1914, About crossing the Atlantic
- Garros, 1914, My opinion of the Monaco Rallye Aérien
- Gaudron, 1903, Twenty-four years of ballooning
- Glaisher, 1903, The late Mr. James Glaisher
- Grahame-White, 1916, To New York by air in fifteen hours
- Guidoni, 1915, Early experiments at launching torpedoes from an aeroplane
H
- Hale, 1914, Crossing the Andes by aero and auto. Bulletin, Pan-American Union, Vol. 38 (Mar. 1914), Washington, D. C., pp. 313-321, ill
- Hammond, 1915, Aero-radio system of national defense
- Hare, 1914, Aerial photography, a new art
- Havens, 1913, From Albany to New York by airboat
- Hawley and Woodhouse, 1916, Why there should be a department of aeronautics and a secretary of aeronautics
- Hawley, 1910, From New York to Washington by air
- Hawley, 1912, The Gordon Bennett balloon cup
- Hawley, 1915, Aero club offers medals of distinction and urges governors of States to provide aviation corps for militia
- Hawley, 1915, The National aeroplane competition and transcontinental race postponed
- Hawley, 1916, America to be first in aeronautics
- Hawley, 1916, Rear Admiral Benson responsible for slash in estimates for naval aeronautics
- Hawley, 1916, The inner trouble in the U. S. Army air service
- Hillier and Hollands, 1902, The bicycle as an accessory to true flight (1)
- Hillier and Hollands, 1903, The bicycle as an accessory to true flight (2)
- Hillier and Hollands, 1903, The bicycle as an accessory to true flight (3)
- Hollands and Hillier, 1902, The bicycle as an accessory to true flight
- Hollands and Hillier, 1902, The bicycle as an accessory to true flight
- Hollands and Hillier, 1903, The bicycle as an accessory to true flight
- Hollands, 1902, Motor aviation of to-day and of recent years (2)
- Hollands, 1903, Motor aviation of to-day and of recent years
- Hollands, 1903, Motor aviation of to-day and of recent years (1)
- Hunsaker, 1914, Europe's facilities for aeronautical research
- Huntington, 1914, A brief on transportation. The economy of the straight line. Some of the places where the aeroplane would solve problems of transportation
- Huntington, 1914, Representative American aviation motors
J
- Jalles, 1888, Aerostaçao
- James Allen and US Signal Corps, 1913, New requirements for scout type military aeroplane
- James Allen, 1913, Report on military aeronautics of Brigadier General James Allen, chief signal officer, U. S. A., to the Secretary of War
- Jannus, 1913, From Omaha to New Orleans by hydroaeroplane
- Jannus, 1913, Touring with hydroaeroplanes
- Jones, 1915, Army aviator makes new endurance record of 8 hours 53 minutes
K
L
- Lagrange, 1913, The need for air machines in the Philippines
- Lahm, 1913, A pioneer American aeronaut (John Wise)
- Lahm, 1914, The special conference of the International Aeronautical Federation
- Lavedan, 1916, France in the air
- Law, 1916, Ruth Law's record breaking flight
- Law, 1917, Miss Ruth Law presented with $2,500 purse -- Victor Carlstrom presented with a gold watch, Erie gives Aero Club of America $10,000 for trans-continental aero-plane race
- Leechman, 1902, Some early flights
- Loening, 1913, Encouraging development of water planes abroad
- Loening, 1913, The Wright hydro-aeroplanes
- Loening, 1914, New steps in aeroboat development
- Loening, 1914, The new Wright aeroboat type "G" -- an interesting development in marine aeroplanes
- Loening, 1914, The new Wright control
- Loening, 1914, The Wright automatic stabilizer
- Loening, 1914, The Wright aviation school at Simms Station
M
- Mackay, 1915, Report of the Mackay trophy contest
- Maddox, 1913, The application of radiotelegraphy to the aeroplane
- Martin, 1915, Glenn L. Martin Company exhibit at Los Angeles
- Marvin, 1914, The aeroplane and weather forecasting
- Marvin, 1914, Weather forecast for flyers
- Maxim, 1908, Aerial navigation by bodies heavier than air (2)
- Maxim, 1914, High explosives as fuel
- McConnell, 1915, The National model aeroplane competition
- McConnell, 1915, Who will do thi
- McCormick, 1915, Golf and aviation seem to mix well
- McCurdy, 1913, Langley Day in Washington
- Means, 1913, The James Means devices
- Merrill, 1913, An analysis of tandem surfaces
- Merrill, 1913, The commercial efficiency of tandem surfaces
- Moffat, 1914, America only source of supply for aeroplanes and engines
- Moffat, 1914, Supplying aeroplanes and aeronautical equipment to Europe
- Moffat, 1914, The American aeronautical industry -- the buyers' guide
- Moffat, 1915, Aeroplanes and neutrality
- Moffat, 1915, The hydroaeroplane is not an airship
- Mortane, 1912, Adolphe Doutre, the inventor of the Doutre automatic stabilizer
- Mortane, 1912, The evolution of military aviation in France
- Mortane, 1913, Calendar of notable events
- Mortane, 1913, Gordon Bennett cup race, 1913
- Mortane, 1913, Marcel Brindejonc des Moulinais -- free lance of the air
- Mortane, 1913, Problems of aerial warfare
- Mortane, 1913, The application of military aeroplanes
- Mortane, 1913, The King of Spain reviews ninety aeroplanes and two dirigibles
- Mortane, 1914, Aerial artillery -- a personal experience
- Mortane, 1914, The Monaco aerial rally
- Mortane, 1914, The sixth Pommery cup contest
- Munro, 1902, Motor balloons and the pole
N
- NACA, 1915, The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics calls for reports
- NACA, 1916, The advisory committee
- National Aeroplane Fund, 1915, National Aeroplane Fund
P
- Parmelin, 1914, Over Mount Blanc by aeroplane
- Peary, 1916, The aero coast patrol
- Peary, 1916, Two-ocean nation should have two-ocean navy
- Pégoud, 1913, Why I looped the loop
- Pégoud, 1914, The lesson of Pégoud
- Pierce, 1914, The use of the compass in aviation
- Porte, 1914, Ready to start for the cross-Atlantic flight
- Post, 1916, Kite-balloons -- the eyes of the artillery
- Post, 1917, Aeroplane vs. captive balloon
- Pourpée, 1914, Aerial transportation in the far east
- Pourpée, 1914, How I flew over the Pyramids
- Preston, 1913, How we won the Gordon-Bennett balloon race
- Publication 106, 1902, The Aero Club
- Publication 10801, 1902, Santos-Dumont at Monte Carlo
- Publication 10804, 1902, Santos-Dumont interviewed
- Publication 10821, 1902, Santos-Dumont's airship
- Publication 11006, 1902, Scientific observations at high altitudes
- Publication 11026, 1903, The secret of aerial navigation
- Publication 11086, 1902, Destruction of the Severo navigable balloon
- Publication 11352, 1901, Some new motor balloons
- Publication 11413, 1902, The Spencer-Mellin airship
- Publication 11429, 1902, Spezia, a British-built airship
- Publication 11481, 1902, Stanley Spencer's success
- Publication 11966, 1901, Tissandier's balloon
- Publication 12046, 1901, Trials of flying machines in Paris
- Publication 12193, 1902, The use of balloons in war (1)
- Publication 12622, 1902, Walker's equilibrium regulator
- Publication 12981, 1902, World's fair at St. Louis
- Publication 1302, 1902, Balloon ascents by the Aeronautical Institute
- Publication 134, 1901, The Aero Club of Great Britain and Ireland
- Publication 1438, 1902, Dr. Barton's airship
- Publication 190, 1902, Aeronautical show in Paris
- Publication 2137, 1903, The de Bradsky catastrophe
- Publication 2167, 1903, The late Fredk. W. Brearey, B. Sc., etc.
- Publication 2225, 1901, The British Aeronautical Society
- Publication 2724, 1902, Chasing a war balloon
- Publication 2978, 1901, Complimentary banquet to Santos-Dumont
- Publication 3900, 1902, The early days
- Publication 3901, 1902, An early flying machine
- Publication 4043, 1902, The English aero club
- Publication 4566, 1901, First ascent of the Aero Club
- Publication 4661, 1903, Flying. Record of aerial navigation with which are incorporated the Flyer, the Flying Machine, the Aerostat, the Aeronaut
- Publication 4675, 1903, Flying machines
- Publication 5764, 1902, Professor Hargrave
- Publication 603, 1902, L. J. Anderson's airship
- Publication 6370, 1903, An interesting aeronautical exhibition
- Publication 6371, 1901, An interesting experiment
- Publication 6393, 1902, International commission on aeronautics
- Publication 6455, 1903, Inventors and the flying machine
- Publication 6462, 1903, The irreligion of flying
- Publication 6737, 1903, Kite flying and the weather
- Publication 7211, 1901, Professor Langley
- Publication 7237, 1902, The late Dr. Otto Lilienthal
- Publication 7240, 1903, The late Percy S. Pilcher
- Publication 8460, 1903, Military ballooning (3)
- Publication 8984, 1902, The Napier airship
- Publication 9109, 1903, New airships in Paris
- Publication B2p0010e08, 1914, The legend of Ader's flight
- Publication B2p0014e02, 1913, The 'Aero and Hydro' 900 miles Great Lakes reliability cruise
- Publication B2p0022e06, 1914, The seventeen-passenger aerobus
- Publication B2p0031e12, 1915, The aeronautical advisors of our nation
- Publication B2p0044e17, 1913, Air travel
- Publication B2p0044e22, 1913, The Airboat still an American product
- Publication B2p0062e11, 1916, American air squadron again victorious
- Publication B2p0064e08, 1916, Some of the representative American aeroplanes
- Publication B2p0064e12, 1917, To make America first in aeronautics
- Publication B2p0066e01, 1915, American society of aeronautic engineers
- Publication B2p0066e05, 1915, The naval consulting board of the United States
- Publication B2p0066e06, 1915, The American Society of Aeronautic Engineers organized
- Publication B2p0066e07, 1915, American Society of Aeronautic Engineers select Messrs. Wood and Sperry for the advisory board
- Publication B2p0075e04, 1916, How the aeronautical appropriations evoluted to $17,166,166
- Publication B2p0099e15, 1913, Auto-Polo Association of America
- Publication B2p0226e05, 1915, The haunted bureau
- Publication B2p0229e09, 1915, Burgess-Dunne hydroaeroplane
- Publication B2p0229e12, 1914, Burgess-Dunne seaplane goes out in search for vessel in distress
- Publication B2p0232e13, 1914, Buyer's guide (The)
- Publication B2p0237e24, 1915, Air destroyer Canada, Commander Porte in this country
- Publication B2p0238e02, 1916, Canada to train 500 aviators for permanent Canadian air service
- Publication B2p0264e26, 1913, Amazing achievements