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  2. Man-lifting kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man-lifting_kite

    In the 1820s British inventor George Pocock developed man-lifting kites, using his own children in his experimentation. [8]In the early 1890s, Captain B. F. S. Baden-Powell, soon to become president of the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain, developed his "Levitor" kite, a hexagonal-shaped kite intended to be used by the army in order to lift a man for aerial observation or for lifting ...

  3. Military radio antenna kites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_radio_antenna_kites

    The United States Signal Corps for a time maintained three models of antenna lifting kites as standard equipment. They were listed in the Signal Corps Storage Catalogue as late as 1920. Kite KI-1, formerly designated the "folding Malay kite", was made of spruce rods glued and wired together, covered with cloth, measuring 60 by 60 inches. It was ...

  4. Samuel Franklin Cody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Franklin_Cody

    Man-lifting War Kite designed by Cody. It is not clear why Cody became fascinated by kite flying. Cody liked to recount a tale that he first became inspired by a Chinese cook; who, apparently, taught him to fly kites, whilst travelling along the old cattle trail. [9]

  5. John Rodgers (naval officer, born 1881) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Rodgers_(naval...

    On February 1, 1911, Rodgers, now a lieutenant, participated in an experiment under the direction of Captain Washington Irving Chambers, the first Navy officer assigned to development of the nascent U.S. Naval aviation program, that involved a man-lifting kite. A train of 11 man-raising kites lifted Rodgers to a record 400 feet off the deck of ...

  6. Grahame-White Type XV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grahame-White_Type_XV

    The Grahame White Type XV was a military trainer biplane produced in the United Kingdom before and during World War I. It is often referred to as the Box-kite, although this name more properly describes the Grahame-White Type XII, an earlier aircraft made by the company, from which the Type XV was derived.

  7. Early flying machines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_flying_machines

    [citation needed] The man-carrying kite was developed a stage further in 1894 by Captain Baden Baden-Powell, brother of Lord Baden-Powell, who strung a chain of hexagonal kites on a single line. A significant development came in 1893 when the Australian Lawrence Hargrave invented the box kite and some man-carrying experiments were carried out ...

  8. History of aviation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_aviation

    Stories of man-lifting kites can be found in Japan, following the introduction of the kite from China around the seventh century AD. For a period, there was a Japanese law against man-carrying kites. [ 20 ]

  9. Unpowered aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unpowered_aircraft

    Man-lifting kites were used in ancient China and Japan, often as a punishment for prisoners. Unmanned hot-air balloons and toy "bamboo-copters" are also recorded in Chinese history. The first manned free flight was in a hot-air balloon built by the brothers Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier in Annonay, France in 1783.