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Blériot’s Toury-Artenay aëroplane circuit, 1908

Blériot’s Toury-Artenay aëroplane circuit, 1908.jpg Mouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplaneMouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplaneMouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplaneMouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplaneMouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplaneMouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplaneMouillard’s aëroplaneThumbnailsDiagram of Curtiss hydro-aëroplane
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Blériot would improve that record at once, by flying in a closed circuit embracing several villages.

His renowned cross-country flight was directed from Toury to Artenay, a village nine miles distant. Mounting his aëroplane VIII-ter, at mid afternoon, in presence of a large gathering, Blériot followed the course shown. In the neighborhood of Artenay he landed for a few minutes. After some slight repairs to his magneto, he reascended, turned about and headed for home. Half way on his return course he stopped again for a few minutes, at the Village of Santilly; then readily reascended and flew to the neighborhood of his starting point. He thus traveled about 17 miles in a closed circuit. This performance, with that of Farman the day before, inaugurated the period of aërial voyages in heavier-than-air machines.

Author
Aërial Navigation
A Popular Treatise on the Growth of Air Craft and on Aëronautical Meteorology
By Albert Francis Zahm
Published in 1911
Available from gutenberg.org
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825*1050
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