Alfred Leblanc
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Alfred Leblanc (13 April 1869 – 22 November 1921) was a pioneer French aviator.


Biography

He was born on 13 April 1869 in Paris. In 1888, he became the technical director of the Victor Bidault metal foundry. A keen sportsman, he was an energetic secretary general of the oldest gymnastic society in Paris, that of the XVIieme arrondissement. He became interested in the sport of
ballooning Ballooning may refer to: * Hot air ballooning * Balloon (aeronautics) * Ballooning (spider) * Ballooning degeneration, a disease * Memory ballooning See also * Balloon (disambiguation) A balloon is a flexible container for (partially or fully) co ...
, rapidly becoming a successful competitor in the races organised by the
Aéro-Club de France The Aéro-Club de France () was founded as the Aéro-Club on 20 October 1898 as a society 'to encourage aerial locomotion' by Ernest Archdeacon, Léon Serpollet, Henri de la Valette, Jules Verne and his wife, André Michelin, Albert de Dion, ...
He later became associated with Louis Blériot, and handled the logistics for Blériot for his cross channel flight of July 25, 1909. He then became the first person to buy a copy of Blériot's aircraft, and also the first pupil at the flying schools which Blériot established, becoming the second person to qualify for an AeCF pilots license through a flight test. (The first licenses were given to prominent aviators without any formal test) He later became one of the chief instructors, and also made proving flights of newly produced Blériot aircraft. He was placed second in the 1909 Gordon Bennett Cup for balloons. In August 1910, flying a Gnome-engined Blériot XI, he won the '' Circuit de l'Est'', covering the in 12hr 1 min 1 sec, an average speed of In November 1910, he represented France in the Gordon Bennett Trophy race for airplanes, held in New York, but misjudged a turn on his last lap, and crashed: had he not done so, he would have won the competition, which was won by
Claude Grahame-White Claude Grahame-White (21 August 1879 – 19 August 1959) was an English pioneer of aviation, and the first to make a night flight, during the ''Daily Mail''-sponsored 1910 London to Manchester air race. Early life Claude Grahame-White was born ...
, also flying a Blériot. During the first World War, he was the general manager of the Blériot factory at Suresnes. In 1919, he was appointed manager of the Compagnie des Messageries Aeriennes, an airline formed by the major French aircraft manufacturers in order to create a civil aviation market, and he was also put in charge of the Societe des Stocks, which was formed to dispose of the large number of surplus aircraft and aero-engines resulting from the end of the First World War. He died 22 November 1921.


Records

*1910 – first pilot to receive a license through an official examination. *1910 –
flight airspeed record An air speed record is the highest airspeed attained by an aircraft of a particular class. The rules for all official aviation records are defined by Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI), which also ratifies any claims. Speed records ...
for 1 mile. File:Alfred LeBlanc congratulated.jpg, Leblanc in his Blériot, being congratulated by
Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe (; 25 September 1846 – 24 November 1919), born Salomon Henry Deutsch, was a successful French petroleum businessman (known as the "Oil King of Europe"Howard, Fred, ''Wilbur & Orville: A Biography'', Dover Publicati ...
, at Nancy, France after the Circuit de l'Est d'Aviation Image:Alfred LeBlanc.jpg,


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Leblanc, Alfred 1869 births 1921 deaths Aviation history of France Aviation pioneers French balloonists Members of the Early Birds of Aviation French aviation record holders