- Diagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplane
- Lenormand’s parachute, 1784
- Ader’s 'Avion'
- Universal anemograph
- Route of British military dirigibles from France to England, 1900
- Da Vinci’s designs for human flying-gear
- Rufus Porter’s dirigible, 1820
- Mouillard’s aëroplane
- General Meusnier’s proposed dirigible, 1784
- Racing Deperdussin Monoplane (side view)
- Penaud’s aëroplane toy, 1871
- Hargrave’s model screw monoplane, 1891
- Santos-Dumont’s Biplane which flew at Bagetelle
- Racing Deperdussin Monoplane (front view)
- Wenham’s aëroplane, 1866
- The hull of a Flying-Boat
- The Etrich monoplane of 1910
- Tatin’s aëroplane model, 1879
- A Bleriot Sea-plane
- Lana’s proposed vacuum balloon
- The car of a modern Balloon
- Fast mail-carrying aeroplanes will make postal deliveries everywhere
- An Avro Sea-Plane
- Looping the loop
- Launoy and Bienvenu’s helicopter, 1784
- Racing Deperdussin Monoplane (top view)
- An Airship leaving its shed
- The Four forces of flight
- A Flying Boat - side view
- The Roe Triplane
- The Control of a Biplane
- Ship saved by life line thrown from a rescue airship
- Control platform of an Airship
- Sopwith Military Biplane
- Early-type Airship
- Wright Brothers' Bicycle shop
- Launching a sea-plane from a wire
- Wright Brotherrs wind tunnel
- Glaisher and Coxwell
- The Curtiss Biplane in flight
- Hull of a Zeppelin during construction
- The Farman Biplane - top view
- Biplane
- Diagram of Curtiss motor, side and front views
- Diagram of a modern spherical balloon with ripping panel
- The Curtiss Biplane making a turn
- The flight of Etana
- Testing the girder-built body of an aircraft
- Fighting Zeppelin raiders
- Grahame-White Military Biplane - front view
- A pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying track
- Diagram of Curtiss Aeroplane, side view
- The Curtiss Biplane front view
- Scientific American Trophy
- Some types of American and foreign aeroplanes
- Grahame-White Military Biplane
- The Wright Brothers Aero Engine
- Some types of American and foreign aeroplanes
- Pilot and passenger
- A mass of wreckage that strikes the deck of one of our warships