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Geoffrey de Havilland, born in 1882, was in his late twenties in
1909. He had a strong and enthusiastic interest in flying
machines, but he was working in London as a draftsman, a job
that did not allow him to express his enthusiasm for airplanes.
Fortunately, he had a wealthy grandfather, and he invested £1000
with young De Havilland for the design and construction of his
first airplane.
Aviation then was much in the news. De Havilland proceeded to
build an engine, while Frank Hearle, the brother of his fiancée,
helped to construct the aircraft. While its wing broke on
takeoff, a second airplane in 1910 was far more successful. It
passed acceptance tests and became the first such craft to be
purchased by the British government.
De
Havilland joined His Majesty's Balloon Factory in Farnborough in
1910 and set to work designing new airplanes. In 1914, only a
month before the outbreak of World War I, he transferred to
private industry and became chief designer at the Aircraft
Manufacturing Company (Airco). He stayed at Airco through the
war.
There he achieved his first major success: the DH-4, a two-seat
bomber that first flew in August 1916. Highly manoeuvrable and
with a top speed of 143 miles per hour (230 km per hour), it
could outfly most fighters. In 1917, when the United States
entered the war, officials in Washington selected it for
production and built nearly 5,000 of them. DH-4s carried the
early U.S. airmail; some also carried passengers. They remained
in service through the 1920s.
After 1918, the end of the war brought a sharp falloff in demand
for new aircraft. The assets of Airco plunged in value, and de
Havilland bought the company. With Airco now in his hands, he
renamed it the De Havilland Aircraft Company. Incorporated in
September 1920, it overhauled existing planes while constructing
a small number of new designs for the Air Ministry and for newly
formed airlines.
Good
aircraft need good engines, and De Havilland was dissatisfied
with those that were available. His longtime friend, the engine
designer Frank Halford, modified a French motor and came up with
one that was lighter in weight and simpler in design. The
company then set up a strong in-house engine division. Its
motors powered De Havilland's highly successful Moth family of
aircraft.
The
first such airplane flew in 1925, ushering in a line that stayed
in production through World War II. These included the Gipsy
Moth that used Halford's Gipsy engine, the Giant Moth, Hawk
Moth, Puss Moth, Swallow Moth, Tiger Moth, Fox Moth, Leopard
Moth, and Hornet Moth. They served as private planes, trainers,
and light airliners.
In
1934, De Havilland's Comet Racer won an air race that ran
halfway around the world, from London to Melbourne, Australia.
This Comet beat a highly touted U.S. entry, the Douglas DC-2. In
an era when boxy biplanes still were common, the Comet showed a
highly streamlined form that foreshadowed the speedy fighter
aircraft of a decade later.
All-aluminium designs had not yet become standard, and the Comet
was built with plywood. De Havilland used the same construction
in an early four-engine airliner, the Albatross, which flew in
1937. Drawing on this experience, the company proceeded to use
plywood in crafting one of the outstanding aircraft of World War
II: the Mosquito.
There were plenty of woodworkers in England, which made them
easy to construct. During much of the war, the Mosquito was the
fastest airplane on either side. Nearly 7,000 of these
twin-engine craft were built during the war. They performed
superbly as fighters, light bombers, and in camera-carrying
versions used for photo-reconnaissance.
An
advanced version, the Hornet, remained in production until
1952—well into the jet age—and stayed in service until 1959.
De
Havilland also took the lead in building jets. The inventor
Frank Whittle constructed an early jet engine prior to the war.
In January 1941, the senior British aviation official Sir Henry
Tizard asked Halford and De Havilland to design a new jet
interceptor and a new engine. Halford simplified Whittle's
design, crafting a successful engine called the Goblin. It
powered the Vampire fighter, which first flew in September 1943.
This led the company to build post-war jet fighters: the Venom
and the Sea Vixen - with De Havilland Aviation having recently
restored a Sea Vixen to an airworthy state in it's original
Royal Navy scheme.
In
1944, De Havilland was knighted and became Sir Geoffrey. This
high point in his life coincided with the high point in his
company's fortunes.
He
built the DH-108, an experimental jet powered by a Goblin that
was to break the sound barrier.
De
Havilland built the world's first jet airliner: the Comet, fitted with four of Halford's more
powerful Ghost jet engines, the Comet entered test flight in
1949 and first carried paying passengers in May 1952. People
fell in love with it. Its speed of 480 mph was unrivalled. It
flew at high altitude, avoiding discomforts of the weather. Its
engines ran smoothly, eliminating the harsh vibration of
conventional motors. Orders poured in.
But
during 1954, two Comets broke up in midair. Investigation showed
that this airliner was subject to a new and unanticipated type
of structural weakness. All remaining Comets were withdrawn from
service, with De Havilland launching a major effort to build a
new version that would be both larger and stronger. This one,
the Comet 4, enabled De Havilland to return to the skies in
1958.
De
Havilland also pushed into the new field of long-range missiles,
developing the liquid-fueled Blue Streak. It did not enter
military service but became the first stage of Europa, a launch
vehicle for use in space flight. In flight tests, the Blue
Streak performed well—but the upper stages, built in France and
Germany, repeatedly failed. In 1973 the Europa program was
canceled, with Blue Streak dying as well.
In
1959, De Havilland Aircraft merged with the firm of Hawker
Siddeley Aviation, while the engine division became part of
Bristol Siddeley.
De
Havilland returned to the airline world in 1962 with a
three-engine jetliner, the Trident. He designed it to
fit the needs of one airline and one man: Lord Sholto Douglas,
chairman of British European Airways. De
Havilland built 117 Tridents.
Sir Geoffrey died in 1965.
Today, De Havilland Aviation Ltd is proud to continue the
tradition of innovation and expertise, helping to keep some of
the world's most famous aircraft gracing the skies. |