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Flying history Manufactured in the late 1920s by the Ford Motor Company, the all-metal Trimotor was revolutionary for its time, carrying up to 15 passengers at speeds of 80 mph.
On October 14, 1947, Captain Chuck Yeager sat in the cockpit of the sleek Bell X-1 at Muroc Army Air Field, preparing to ...
The Golden Age of Aviation of the 1920s and ’30s was characterized by the ascendancy of female pilots — though they had to ...
Sixteen-year-old aviator Kaden Vorgity shares his journey from first flight to becoming the youngest cadet at the ...
The Bay Area aeronautics company behind what it’s calling "the first true flying car in history" announced Tuesday that it ...
California-headquartered startup Alef Aeronautics has received an overwhelming response for its futuristic flying car, the Alef Model A. The company has secured 2,850 preorders, amounting to over ...
It was September 4, 1929, and the excitement was real. People gathered at what was called the Bethlehem Airport were about to meet Amelia Earhart.
Army Flying Museum in Hampshire hosts special guided tours and film screenings for Open Days, celebrating British Army aviation history.
The aircraft acts as a flying piece of history, showing the development of aviation across the Great Lakes.