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Richard Pearse FIRST FLYER |
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Richard Pearse: "Mad
Pearse", "Bamboo Dick", self-taught inventor, prophetic
designer, trail blazing aviator and eccentric visionary. On or about
31st March 1903 a reclusive New Zealand farmer Richard Pearse climbed into a
self-built monoplane and flew for about 140 metres
before crashing into a gorse hedge on his Waitohi property . Even at half the distance Pearse
must have felt the liberating but anxious exhilaration of flying. There
is uncertainty about whether it met the definitions of sustained
flight, but it came eight months before the Wright Brothers entered the record books at Kitty Hawk North Carolina on 17th
December 1903.
The centenary of the achievement of the Wright Brothers was celebrated in 2003 as one of the defining moments of the Twentieth Century. The event is etched in our consciousness as an enduring symbol of imagination and technological triumph in mans never-ending confrontation with nature. Conversely, Pearse was largely forgotten until, when forty or fifty years ago, the remains of one of his prototype airplane models were discovered in a Christchurch garage. He died in obscurity and his achievements have been clouded by the controversy over whether or not he "flew" before the fully documented Wright brothers flights. Grid jostling aside, Pearses achievements might be remembered as even more remarkable in that, unlike the Wright brothers, who employed skilled engineers, and later enjoyed the luxury of government sponsorship, Pearse managed to get airborne with no technical training and absurdly scant resource. On his isolated farm at the edge of the world he relied on practical ingenuity and trial-and-error innovation to design, finance and build everything himself. It was sheer achievement against the odds: a modern day Icarus from down under who fashioned his wings not from feathers and wax, but bamboo and scrap metal. Childhood Dreaming
Richard, by disposition
introspective, gentle, quiet and somewhat aloof, was a dreamer even at
school, to the detriment of his studies. He excelled in one subject -
engineering - and demonstrated an interest in flying and an
eager mechanical curiosity from an early age. By the time he had
finished his primary education at Waitohi his tinkering had
blossomed into several inventions. These included a mechanical needle
threader for his mother, a zoetrope for his sisters that produced
moving-images by flicking through a series of still pictures, and a
small steam engine made from a golden syrup tin filled with water. One
day he arrived at the one room Upper-Waitohi school with a contraption
consisting of a cotton reel, a nailed board, a piece of string, and the
top of a herring tin cut and twisted into a propeller. He wound the
string around the reel, tugged on it and sent the tin propeller shooting
off from the nail. For the amusement of his classmates he had
unwittingly made a facsimile of the earliest aircraft known: a mechanical
toy first pictured in the pages of a 14th Century Flemish
manuscript. After finishing school the young Pearse wanted to study
engineering at Canterbury College, but the family could not afford it
and instead, in 1898, when he turned 21, he was given the use of a
nearby 100-acre farm block, which he was to farm intermittently for the
next 13 years. |
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Farmer Pearse lived on at Trewarlet, turning his new propertys iron roofed cottage into a workshop where, behind a large overgrown gorse hedge, he began to work into the night on his inventions. It was the beginning of the reclusive lifestyle that was to characterise the rest of his days. He designed and built his own lathe and forge (from cast-offs found at the tip), and rather than tending to the farm, spent most of his time inventing gadgets. The first output of his one-man factory was an ingenious style of bicycle. Patented in 1902 it was constructed out of a bamboo frame, with a vertical drive pedal action, rod-and-rack gearing system, back pedal rim brakes and integral tyre pumps. But Pearse was obsessed with the lure of the birds eye view, putting endless hours into its pursuit: "Evening crinkles the land/into folds of the brain", writes poet Bill Sewell in "Solo Flight", his meditation on Pearse. There is evidence that from 1899, Pearse had begun working on solutions to realise his dream of powered flight. In the context of the time and place this was a quixotic ambition. The "horseless carriage" was only a recent invention, far removed from the isolated horse-and-gig farming community that was Temuka. Most people thought flight was impossible, a science-fiction fantasy, while others saw it as a lunatic and heretic act to strive for the heavens: "if God had wanted man to fly he would have given him wings." But regardless of interpretations of their decree, the heavens have always lured: from the Chinese invention of the kite over 3,000 years ago, through Greek mythology, to Leonardo da Vincis Renaissance designs for a flying machine, the problem of getting airborne had fascinated generations of innovators.
By the end of the 18th Century the first manned balloons were sent up by the French Montgolfier brothers. German aviation engineer Otto Lilienthal had achieved glided flight for up to 300 metres before a fatal crash in 1896. By the turn of the 20th Century Graf Ferdinand von Zeppelin had built the first successful dirigible (or airship). A cluster of inventors had experimented with powered flight, to varying degrees of failure and broken bones: utilizing everything from avian-imitating wing flapping to American Hiram Maxims mammoth craft with 32.5m cloth-covered wing frames. The first flight in New Zealand was a balloon sent aloft ten years previously, and it wasnt until 1907, three years after the Wright brothers' efforts, that a heavier-than-air craft, other than Pearses, would be attempted to be built in New Zealand. Faced with ridicule and indifference, Pearse continued to work industriously in the secrecy of his workshop. Without access to a university library and oceans away from centres of technology and scientific debate, he kept up with developments through a subscription to overseas magazines such as Scientific American (in one of the many contradictions of Pearses life, he was often seen by locals with his head buried in the latest issue of the magazine, distracted, while trudging behind a horse-drawn plough). For him the immediate problem was that he needed a suitable internal combustion engine. Unable to buy a purpose built engine, he was helped by Timaru engineer Cecil Wood (the first person in New Zealand to build an internal combustion engine), making his own spark plugs, carburettors and crankshafts plundered from old tobacco tins and cast-iron irrigation pipes. An article in the Scientific American, dated 1909, shows Pearse's remarkable idea of an ignition timing system built inside a spark plug. From scratch Pearse set out to adapt the engines being fitted for cars, to flight. For months nothing seemed to come of his toil until one evening in 1902 the sleepy Waitohi Valley was woken by the reverberations of what seemed to be the arrival of the stampeding horses of the apocalypse. Pearse's first successful two-cylinder, 25 horsepower petrol engine had rattled to life, frightening cattle, provoking the ire of local farmers and leading one local to fear that the Boer War had come to New Zealand. Nevertheless the engine worked, and unlike the bulky engines that were being developed to power automobiles, it weighed a mere 57kg. This led Pearse to claim his was the lightest engine in the world for its power (equivalent car engines of the time were four times as heavy). Then, using bamboo, tubular steel, wire and canvas, he constructed a low aspect ratio monoplane. Its 25-foot wingspan was supported on a tricycle undercarriage. Of prophetic design, it closely resembled in appearance a modern micro-light aircraft. |
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Into The Insubstantial Air Pearse carried out endless trials of his creation. A neighbour reported seeing him steer his "beast" around his paddocks using reins attached to the controls, another reported seeing him jogging along after the plane holding the wings trailing edge. The time came for the fist attempt at flight. Wheeling his plane down to the school crossroads on Main Waitohi Road, adjacent to the Pearse farm, Richard tried several times to start the engine in front of a small crowd who had heard that "Bamboo Dick" was up to something. Late in the afternoon the engine finally burst into life and lumbered into the air. The craft immediately lurched left due to a lack of suitable control, then climbed slowly for a short distance before crashing into the pilot's own gorse hedge. Most witness accounts have the distance traveled as somewhere between 100 - 150 metres, with more generous estimates suggesting that Pearse may have flown up to 400 metres.
To the exasperation of
believers and skeptics alike, and the source of the controversy over
whether or not Pearse "flew", no details of the flight were
recorded, by Pearse or onlookers. Unlike the Wrights attempt in Kitty
Hawk, no one in Waitohi wielded a camera or measured the airspeed of the
gorse-bound excursion. No proof exists to pinpoint the date or offer proof
of the flight: records of the visit Pearse made to the local hospital
after injuring his collarbone in the fall were destroyed in a fire, and
a photo of the aircraft prone in the hedge, taken by a professional
photographer the day after the flight, was later destroyed in flooding. |
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The First Flight? Pearse himself, in two letters, the first to Dunedins Evening Star, published on May 10th 1915, the second published in the Christchurch Star on September 15th 1928, didnt believe, by his own rigorous standards, that he had achieved proper flight. For him this meant a powered take-off followed by "sustained and controlled flight". Pearses flights, characterised by powered take-offs followed by erratic descents, failed to meet his own criteria. In the letters he states that he set out to solve the problem of aerial navigation in February or March 1904, and acknowledges that pre-eminence should be given to the Wright brothers. They flew on 17 December 1903 and achieved aerial navigation in 1905 and achieved aerial navigation in 1905. However, as Pearses biographer Gordon Ogilvie, points out, " a great deal of eyewitness testimony, able to be dated circumstantially, suggests that 31 March 1903 was the likely date of this first flight attempt." One or two eyewitnesses have mentioned the date of March 1902 as the first take-off date, but with all surviving witnesses now dead and no extant documentary evidence, the claims are likely to remain unproven. Regardless of the exact date of Pearses first foray and the irresolution of the debate over whether it could acceptably be termed flight, his first aircraft was a remarkable design achievement. The tragic paradox of Pearse is that it was to have absolutely no impact whatsoever on the development of aviation history. Yet his design, like the flight, unrecognised in his lifetime, was unerringly ahead of its time, embodied visionary concepts that would become commonplace in the worlds aircraft of the future. As Vaughan Yarwood notes in "The Birdman of Waitohi" (New Zealand Geographic, Oct-Dec 1999) they would usurp the Wright brothers in design preference in almost every particular: single wing as opposed to biplane, wheels in preference to skids, propeller at the front, not the back, and moveable wing panels incorporating the worlds first aileron controls instead of wing warping closely resembling the method of control used in todays high speed aircraft. "The Wright's got the recognition, Pearse the legacy."
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"A Plane in Every
Home" In 1921, weary of the land and plummeting wool prices, Pearse sold up at Milton and moved to Woolston, Christchurch. He built three houses, renting out two of them and living on his own in the third. Using the rental income to work on his inventions, and becoming ever more secretive and reclusive. He turned his house's garage into his workshop and, in the early 1930s set about designing and building a second aircraft: his "Utility Plane". It had an engine that could be changed in pitch, so the aircraft was able "to take off vertically on rough ground or limited areas" anticipating vertical take-off jet-aircraft such as the Harrier Jump Jet. It was Pearses vision that his plane would be the Model-T Ford of the airways, "the private plane for the million", able to be flown from any suburban backyard and, with fold-a-way wings, able to stored in the garage.
The inventor, who had
been experimenting with flight since before automobiles were anything
other than a novelty, now dreamed of flight for the masses. He applied
for a patent in November 1943, and after battling bureaucracy for six
years it was finally granted in 1949. His plane was however, never flown. Sadly
for Pearse, his design, an eclectic mix of the prophetic and the
outmoded, was out of its time. By now the Sikorsky helicopter had been
successfully tested and research into the jet engine was surpassing the
propeller (coincidentally another New Zealander, William Pickering, was at the leading edge of this research at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, USA). Embittered and disillusioned by the |
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Lonely Death and Posthumous
Resurrection In his lifetime Richard Pearse saw his efforts ridiculed and his patents ignored. Fifty years of research into the potential of flight had reaped nothing. His death had gone unnoticed and the wider world knew nothing of his work, which had no discernable influence on the development of aviation. It was only through the serendipitous discovery of the model for Pearses Utility plane, locked away in his Christchurch garage, that he is remembered at all. His reputation, was posthumously resurrected by the dedicated efforts of the late George Bolt (a former Chief Engineer for Tasman Empire Airways and himself a pioneer aviator). Bolt rescued the relics of Pearses life from almost certain oblivion, tracking down surviving witnesses and rescuing machinery from the Waitohi refuse dump. His work was later advanced by others made curious by Pearses quixotic story, men such as Geoff Rodliffe and Gordon Ogilvie.
Sparked by the diverting
controversy over whether he flew before the Wright brothers, Pearse soon entered popular Kiwi folklore. A NZBC
documentary on his life was produced, and in the mid 70s a replica of his
first aircraft was constructed. The replica, complete with Pearse's unique
engine toured throughout New Zealand, and was exhibited at Aucklands Museum
of Transport and Technology where it remains to be seen
today. In 1980 it was subjected to wind tunnel tests at Auckland
University and found to be capable of flying in a manner similar to modern
micro-lights. The replica was also exhibited at the Vancouver Expo 86,
and in a fitting irony was dismantled and flown to Canada in the hold of
a Boeing 747. Timaru airport is named in Pearses honour, and numerous
plays, television documentaries and poetry have been written on him. In 1999
Pearse was featured in New Zealand Posts "Leading the Way" |
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The Legacy of "Mad
Pearse" The Concorde crash in Paris in July 2000, primarily an event of tragic human loss, may later be read as symbolic of the romance of flight falling from the skies. That its flight path, a brief urging towards the sky before lurching back towards the earth, closely resembled the early flights of pioneering Kiwi inventor Richard Pearse is an unfortunate irony. Rewind almost one hundred years: Pearse emerged from his sortie into a gorse bush with a few bumps and bruises, the passengers on the 25th July flight did not survive. One was a flight of hope, an Icarus yearning for the sun, the other a casualty of the future, a supersonic vision of high performance excellence salvaged from the space age. One embodied one mans practical, industrious imagination: a tightly coiled roll of No.8 fencing wire, the other the application of untold research, money and resource dedicated to the pursuit of luxury and speed.
In the later years of his life Pearses everyman dream was "a plane for the millions", the Model-T mass-produced consumerist ideal that might make ubiquitous the wonder of flight. The tragic irony of Pearses life is that his pioneering and ingenious innovations were never recognised in his lifetime, or else they were developed and surpassed elsewhere he didnt have the "Wright stuff". As his biographer Gordon Ogilvie writes:
From a land of travellers,
whose national symbol is a poorly sighted, flightless bird, came an eccentric
visionary with a soaring imagination who managed, against the most
improbable odds, far away from any centre, of scientific debate or
knowledge, to upset assumptions and become airborne. Pearse was a prophetic
designer and engineer who had absolutely no influence whatsoever on the
course of history, yet he is immortalized for his inventiveness, ingenuity and
achievement against the odds of ridicule, geography and resources.
Richard Pearse: the Kiwi who flew. |
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Our thanks to
Geoff Rodliffe for his insight, encouragement, material and pictures. Rodliffe, Geoffrey
(1993). Wings over Waitohi, Auckland. Rodliffe, Geoffrey (1997). Richard Pearse Aviator, Auckland (for the younger reader). Moore, Helen and Rodliffe, Geoffrey (1999). "Oh for the Wings of a Moth", Auckland. Yarwood, Vaughan
(1999). "The Birdman of Upper
Waitohi", in New Zealand Geographic, Oct-Dec.
The Pain and the Passion written and directed by Sherry Ede (email: edenpacific@xtra.co.nz), performed at the Company Theatre, Belmont, Auckland in June 2000. Too High the Son, by Stephen Bain and France Herve - Playmarket. Web Links [accessed December 2000]: Official NZ history site with an article by Gordon Ogilvie from The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, Vol 3 (1996) includes a virtual "loop the loop" simulation in Pearses first flying machine. Time Magazine "Time 100", "Most Influential People of the South Pacific" issue. Geoffrey Rodliffe article in Avstop magazine detailing his research, including witness testimony, into Pearses early flights. Geoffrey Rodliffe's homepage. New Zealand journalist Debbi Gardiner's article about her Great Uncle Pearse in Salon. "Had he been an American, not a New Zealander, his greatness would surely have been recognized sooner. And yet the fact that he was a New Zealander, and one ostracized by the locals, may well have what made him so determined to fly." New Zealand Post "Leading the Way" Millennium stamp issue. Auckland Museum of Transport and Technology. Aviation fan Chris Bradys site, featuring information on early aviators with a substantial illustrated article on Pearse, including major links. Auckland Airport page on Pearse. Temuka homepage. Entry on Pearse in the Working Class Encyclopedia. Lively debate stimulated by the play The Pain and the Passion. Bill Sherwoods Australian tribute site to Pearse: "Mans first powered flight": Christchurch City Council Library page on Pearse biographer Gordon Ogilvie. Victoria University page on poet Bill Sewell. Forgotten Silver links: Peter Jacksons official fansite. New Zealand Washington Embassy site review of the film. LA Times review. "Films of the Golden Age" review. Poem: Come to the edge, he said. He pushed them, and they
flew... WRITTEN BY PAUL WARD COPYRIGHT NZEDGE.COM IP HOLDINGS LIMITED
1998-2007. Sites which have linked to this page:
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