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History of Airships and Balloons

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The Baldwin Dirigible

Baldwin Dirigible

Baldwin Dirigible

Photo Top - Dirigible No. 1 in hangar at Fort Myer, Virginia.
Photo Bottom - The Baldwin dirigible in flight.

During the summer of 1908, the U.S. Army tested the Baldwin dirigible. Lts. Lahm, Selfridge and Foulois flew the dirigible. Thomas Baldwin was appointed by the United States Government to superintend the building of all spherical, dirigible and kite balloons. He built the first Government airship in 1908.

An American inventor Thomas Baldwin built a 53-foot airship, the California Arrow. It won a one-mile race in October 1904, at the St. Louis World Fair with Roy Knabenshue at the controls. In 1908, Baldwin sold the U.S. Army Signal Corps an improved dirigible that was powered by a 20-horsepower Curtiss engine. This machine, designated the SC-1, was the Army's first powered aircraft.

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