In 1920, the idea of an Air Show first came to America from
Europe when Joseph Pulitzer, publisher of the New York
World, put up the money for a race on Long Island’s
Mitchell Field. Pulitzer’s goal was to reawaken interested
in aviation, which was suffering from post WWI apathy.
The event
circulated to different cities for nine years and was
finally brought to Cleveland in 1929 by a group of local
businessmen headed by Louis W. Greve and Frederick C.
Crawford. Greve was president of the Cleveland Pneumatic
Tool Company, which made the hydraulic undercarriages that
held the wheels on airplanes. Crawford was general manager
and later president of Thompson Products Inc., now a part of
TRW Inc. Thompson Products developed the experimental
sodium-cooled valves, which enabled Charles Lindbergh’s
Spirit of St. Louis to reach France.
The 1929
Cleveland National Air Races had full civic support not only
from the City Manager W. R. Hopkins but from the Cleveland
Chamber of Commerce, major industries, the city and the
nation’s military air arms. Numerous local business and
hotels where approached to underwrite the event and purchase
entertainment tickets. Among the supporters the Hotel
Statler pledged $5,000. Companies which made airplane parts
were also asked to offer cash prizes for the various races.
The event was a
10-day (August 24 – September 2) sensation setting the
highest standard for Air Shows with amazing demonstrations,
size, duration and attendance. The inauguration ceremonies
opened with a downtown parade that rivalled the Rose Bowl
Tournament parade. An estimated 300,000 spectators from all
over the country watched 200 floats, 21 bands and 1,500
marchers strut down Euclid Avenue as three Goodyear blimps
flew overhead. In conjunction with the Air Show, a
$3,000,000 display of planes filled Cleveland’s Public
Auditorium, 5,000 pigeons were released on Public Square,
and aerial acrobatics and fireworks reigned over head. Over
100,000 spectators attended the opening day of the Air
Races.
Hopkins (named
after the city manager) opened four years earlier as "the
first major municipal-owned airport in the world and covered
1,050 acres. Its well-lighted runways and level surface free
from hazards made it an ideal location for such races. The
city built permanent grandstands and there were hangers
available for visiting aircraft. The airport was so large
that the Air Races could take place without interfering in
normal airport operations.
In 1929,
airplanes were still considered something of a science
fiction fantasy, therefore the exciting flying events were
reported in newspapers around the world. The daily flying
schedule included "dead stick" landing contests, glider
demonstrations, Goodyear blimp flights, parachute jumping
contests and military demonstrations. The Navy High Hats, a
formation team formed long before the Blue Angels, created a
worldwide sensation by flying with their planes tied
together by one-inch ropes from wing-struts to wing struts.
Even the late Charles A. Lindbergh was in the show flying a
Boeing biplane. There were also closed-course pylon races
and cross-country races from as far away as Log Angeles,
Miami and Toronto; all timed to reach Cleveland on different
days of the show. Women pilots, including the already famous
Amelia Earhart, raced in a special "Powder Puff Derby" from
Santa Monica, California, to Cleveland.
But it was the
closed-course racing that provided the most thrills for the
fans in the stands. The Thompson Race, the first
free-for-all closed-course race, was five laps around a
10-mile circuit. "Smiling" Doug Davis, a civilian pilot from
Atlanta won the race with an average speed of 194.9 miles
per hour. The Thompson Trophy based on the Greek Legend of
Icarus who melted his feathered wings by flying too close to
the sun, became equal in stature to the Green Jacket of the
Masters Golf Tournament. In turn the world’s top aviators
competed for the right to keep it for a year.
Six pilots were
killed during the 1929 event. All but one died during
cross-country trips away from Hopkins Airport. Thomas Reid
crashed in nearby Fairview Park trying to set a new solo
endurance record.
The Cleveland
Air Races also had glittering social events each evening,
and filled the nation’s newspapers with pictures and stories
about the glamorous personalities of the era. Cleveland
truly was the aviation capital of the universe for those 10
days.
In 1930 the
races were held in Chicago, but the National Aeronautical
Association which licensed the races returned the show to
Cleveland on the basis of its 1929 success. The Cleveland
show had turned a profit of $90,000. The only other show to
ever do more than break even was Spokane, Washington, in 1927
with a profit of $485. By 1931 the closed-course races and
speed dashes had replaced most of the cross-country races.
The Thompson Race first prize was increased to $7,500 which
was a large sum of money during the Depression. But it was
the danger element, just like the Indy 500, which kept the
crowds coming back.
In 1934 the
Depression had cut the purses and the show had shrunk to a
Labour Day weekend festival, similar to today’s Air Show. It
was also in 1934 that the first closed-course racer, Doug
Davis, went down. Davis’s death allowed Roscoe Turner, the
flamboyant barnstormer, to win his first Thompson Race.
Turner returned the next year, losing the Bendix race from
Los Angeles to Cleveland by 23 seconds to Benny Howard.
Turner vowed to win the Thompson Race, which had been
increased, to 10 laps around a 15-mile course. Over 85,000
spectators watched Turner lead the race for eight laps. Then
the blade on his Hornet engine snapped off. In a split
second decision, Turner landed the smoking plane with a
couple of bounces in front of the finish line stealing the
show.
The Air Races
continued to be successful despite the Depression.
Therefore, the National Aeronautical Association gave
Cleveland a five-year option on the event. However, in 1936,
the expansion at Hopkins forced the races to move to Los
Angeles. The Thompson Race returned the next year, and it
proved to be the most exciting yet. Earl Ortman in his black
Bromberg Special was battling Roscoe Turner’s plane neck and
neck most of the race when Turner’s oil-splashed windshield
made him think he had missed a pylon. As Turner re-circled
the pylon he fell behind Ortman. Ortman throttled back
saving his engine because he had thought he won. However,
Rudy Kling, an auto mechanic from Illinois, raced past
Ortman just as they passed the finished line. Kling beat
Ortman by an amazingly close time of 256.858 to 256.910
miles per hour.
In 1938 the
National Aeronautical Association announced rule changes to
what was becoming known as the Cleveland Air Races. There
would only be two high-speed events, the Thompson and Greve
races. The qualifying races would decide the best starting
positions. Once again the Thompson Race was increased to 30
laps around a 10-mile course. In addition a record pre-war
purse of $45,000 would be shared. Only eight planes
qualified for what was billed as "300 miles of the world’s
toughest flying." Roscoe Turner was again the favourite. He
won his second Thompson Trophy when Ortman missed a pylon.
As the war took
shape in Europe, it became difficult for the pilots to gain
financial support necessary for the increasingly
sophisticated planes. Some pilots became creative. For
example, Roscoe Turner travelled with a lion cub in his
plane to generate publicity and an image. However, after
Turner won the Thompson Trophy for the third time in 1939
(allowing him to keep the trophy), he announced his
retirement thus ending an era. In addition the military was
withdrawing its support from the Air Show industry and there
were no new airplane designs. As America geared up its war
machine the races were discontinued.
Over the years
the publicized accidents and deaths linked with the races
were often blamed for hampering the airplane’s evolution as
a means of transportation and communication. However, the
races stimulated engine and structural innovation, which
helped America win the war.
After the war
the Aircraft Industrial Association, an aircraft
manufactures trade group, brought back the races to Los
Angeles and Cleveland to showcase the advances made during
the war. Cleveland once again obtained a five-year franchise
for the event.
The planes
developed during the war dwarfed older aircraft but pilots
could obtain used fighter aircraft like surplus P-51s for as
little as $1,000. The 1946 event had a jet division and
large scale military participation. Ninety pilots from
across the country entered their modified surplus planes.
Competition was intense after the seven-year layoff and the
planes plus pilots had to pass strict safety/ability tests.
Over 180,000 spectators paid to see Tex Johnson a 32 year
old test pilot win the reciprocating engine (propeller)
division at a speed of 373.908. That was 90 miles per hour
faster than Roscoe Turner’s time in 1939.
For the next
two years Captain Cook Cleland, a 29 year old Clevelander,
former Thompson Products employee and WWII Navy flying ace
became the man to beat. Cleland purchased two Navy Corsair
fighter planes and modified them to win the 1947 and 1949
races. However the 1949 races were overshadowed by a
tragedy. Bill Odam was in pursuit of Cleland was his green
Mustang banked too sharply around the second pylon, cut
inside the course, flipped upside down and crashed into a
Brea home, killing a young mother and her baby son. It was
the first time that anyone other than a participant was
killed.
Bill Odom’s death marked the end of closed-course racing,
and Defence Department budget cuts halted military
participation in future shows. After 20 years of thrills and
spills the National Air Races closed its doors.
The present
series of Air Shows at Burke Lakefront Airport began in 1964
with the help of George Steinbrenner and Cleveland’s Port
Director, Noel Painchaud. In 1965 the second Greater
Cleveland Air Show featured the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds,
the U.S. Army Golden Knights and a fly-by of a Strategic Air
Command Convair B-58 Hustler four-jet, supersonic bomber. In
1967, racing returned to Cleveland for the first time in 18
years with a closed-course Formula I race. Fifty race pilots
participated and the nation’s top aerobatic pilots on the
program included Hal Krier, Bill Fornof, Charles Hillard and
Bob Hoover.
Since the late
60’s, the Cleveland National Air Show has continued to bring
the finest in aviation with the first baton pass between
wing walkers and the first Ohio appearance of the British
Airways Concorde. Cleveland was also the first stop on the
historic 1991 Soviet MiG-29 Friendship Tour and has
received the "Air Show of the Year" award from World Airshow
News. The Air Show has become an annual Cleveland Labour Day
Weekend tradition attracting over 100,000 spectators and
aviators from all over the world.
Roscoe Turner
The
Aircraft of The National Air Races
The
diminutive Speed King 1 in a photo taken in 1930. This
airplane was built for the Cirrus derby in 1930 and raced
nearly every year till 1937 she did 142 mph in 1930 and by
1935 she had the best speed at the races, making 187.65 mph,
flown by Harold Neumann
Roscoe Turner's Weddell Williams racer of 1934 was the most
powerful engined racer up to that time. The 1000 hp P&W
Hornet engine propelled the racer to a second place in the
dashes at 295.47 mph. Turner failed to race in the Bendix
due to a fuel leak but did win the Thompson Trophy after
race leader Doug Davis crashed his Weddell-Williams No. 44.
Davis' crash marked a particularly grisly chapter in the
races. Dad remembers the crowd rushing to the crash site and
grabbing pieces of the plane as souvenirs, with some people
actually soaking up Davis' blood in handkerchiefs as
keepsakes. The number 57 was for his sponsor, H. J. Heinz &
Co.
Ben Howard's little "Pete". Howard found a Wright Gypsy
engine in storage, talked the owner into loaning it to him
and then built this little gem around it. Howard was a pilot
for United Airlines and raced as a hobby. This photo is from
the 1930 National Air Races.
The famous "Winnie Mae" flown by Wiley Post. Post became
famous in 1930 by winning the 1930 Los Angeles - Chicago
race. This Lockheed Vega established an around the world
flight record of 8 days, 15 hours, 51 minutes in 1931 with
co-pilot Harold Gatty. In 1933 Post set a solo around the
world record with Winnie Mae.
Miss Los Angeles, built by Lawrence Brown for the 1934
Nationals. Painted a scarlet red, she sported a 300hp
Menasco engine and turned an impressive 243.14 mph in the
Shell Speed Dashes that year. Miss L.A. came in second in
the '34 Thompson race at 213.25 mph. As with many planes of
the era, Miss L.A. was lost in another tragic crash that
killed pilot Lee Williams when she stalled at the first
pylon in the Greve race of '39.
The famous "Chester Special", built in 1932 and first raced
in 1933 at the Los Angeles Nationals. She took one first
place and four fourth places and averaged 154.365 in her
best race. Her best speed ever was 190.95 in the Chicago
races.
The "Tilbury Flash" was a regular at the air race circuit
during the 30's. A homely craft flown by Art Carnahan, Flash
won the 115 cu. in. engine event at Chicago in 1933. Her
tiny 45 hp Church engine pushed her to 114.92 mph.
The Miles Atwood special. This little Menasco engined racer
topped out at 189.6 mph and placed sixth piloted by Lee
Miles in the 1935 Greve race. She came back to Cleveland in
'36 but did not do any better.
After WWII, the races were dominated by refitted military
aircraft and the era of the homebuilt or experimental racer
was over. The races became a showcase of military and
commercial speed and power with the smaller planes more of a
sideshow. This photo is of Tony LeVier's P-38 which won the
Thompson in 1946. The Thompson line up that year was, 1st
place, a Bell P-39, 2nd place, LaVier'sP-38, 3rd place, a
P-51. The golden age of aviation was over.