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HEAD TO HEAD:
Replicas of Santos-Dumont's
Demoiselle (left) and the Wright Brothers' "B" Flyer fly
side-by-side in Miamisburg, Ohio, last month.
TV GREENLEES/AP
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A century on, Brazil still claims flight's first
Monday, Brazilians celebrate the first man to fly. But here's a
hint: He wasn't a Wright brother.
By Andrew Downie
RIO DE JANEIRO
In the United States, every schoolboy knows that the Wright
Brothers were the first men to fly. In Brazil, everyone knows
that's wrong - the father of flight is Alberto Santos-Dumont.
One hundred years ago Monday Santos-Dumont set off an
argument that still rages when he launched, flew, and landed a
boxy biplane christened "14bis" above a field in France. In
Brazil, where he is a national hero, everyone passionately
believes that his flight was the first.
"The image of the Wright Brothers as the first people to fly
has gone around the world, but it wasn't documented," says
Henrique Lins de Barros, a flight historian and author of the
book, "Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flight."
"Santos-Dumont's '14bis' managed to make a complete flight,
taking off, flying, and landing without external assistance. The
Wright Brothers didn't. Nationalism aside, I am a researcher and
there is no controversy - Santos-Dumont was the first man to
fly."
The Aero-Club de France, a Paris-based federation that was
set up in 1905 to rule on the veracity of first-in-flight
claims, confirmed that Santos-Dumont was flying's pioneer. The
federation awarded a trophy cup to Santos-Dumont after the
Wright Brothers refused to provide evidence that they flew
unaided at Kitty Hawk in 1903.
The Aero-Club had several stipulations for the award-winner.
He had to be the first man to take off from flat ground
unassisted, fly in a straight line with his own power source on
board, and most important, do it in front of a crowd of
witnesses and judges. Moreover, the flight must have taken place
on a preordained day, not one chosen for its propitious weather
conditions.
Brazilians feel the American pair did not fulfill all those
requirements, claiming that their plane took off from an incline
or a ramp and that no independent witnesses could verify the
feat. Mr. Lins de Barros says the lack of confirmation led the
International Herald Tribune newspaper to run a story in 1906
about the Wright Brothers entitled "Flyers or Liars?"
Santos-Dumont, meanwhile, was a showman. He won a big cash
prize after becoming the first man to fly a dirigible around the
Eiffel Tower, invented what is considered the first microlight
aircraft in 1909, and made design changes to the wristwatch that
made them more financially accessible.
In his homeland, he is considered an eccentric genius.
Brazil's president recently named him a national hero, only the
ninth person to ever receive such an honor, and he is without
doubt the best known Brazilian who didn't act, sing, or play
soccer, according to Marisa Guadalupe Plum, the woman in charge
of the Santos-Dumont House and Museum.
Schools, roads, businesses, airports, towns, and even a small
crater on the moon have been named after him.
However, in spite of his achievements few people really know
him, Ms. Plum says.
"People only know that he is the father of aviation and
that's it," she says. "Brazilians lack self esteem and we aren't
proud of what we've done."
Outside Brazil, he is equally obscure, Plum adds, because
"Brazil has an image as a place of sun, sea, sand, and sex, and
Santos-Dumont is in complete contrast to that and so there was
no interest in getting to know him. People couldn't see how
important he was because they saw Brazil as a country where you
go to enjoy yourself."
Brazil is making efforts to change that this weekend by
highlighting his achievements. The armed forces hosted tourists
and visitors at Air Force bases and were planning flybys in the
capital, Brasília, on Sunday, where, if weather permits, a
replica of the 14bis was to fly over the city center.
Even Americans dismissive of Santos-Dumont were eager to mark
the anniversary - while stressing that the Brazilians' claims of
dominance fell short of the mark.
"The claims that the Brazilians make that he was the first to
fly are ridiculous," says Peter Jakab, chairman of the
Aeronautics division at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space
Museum in Washington, another institution hosting special
exhibitions this weekend. "It's like saying a modern jet fighter
that uses a catapult to take off from an aircraft carrier isn't
a real plane."
The Wright Brothers had superior control over their aircraft
and managed other flights between 1903 and 1906 that gave them a
distinct advantage over Santos-Dumont, Mr. Jakab adds. But he
did not dismiss the Brazilian's role as one of flight's true
pioneers.
"Santos-Dumont was a very important figure. He is such a
popular figure. He was a flashy, dynamic figure who brought a
lot of attention to aeronautics, and he deserves a lot of credit
for all his accomplishments."
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