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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

‘Nova’ looks at flight pioneer

Kevin Mcdonough United Feature Syndicate

Eras of invention and innovations are often hallmarked by dueling personalities. Think of electricity’s Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla or the personal computer’s Steve Jobs and Bill Gates.

Tonight’s “Nova” (7 p.m., KSPS) presentation “Wings of Madness” teaches us that modern aviation also had a contrasting pair of founders. But while we remember the Wright Brothers, their rival, Alberto Santos-Dumont, has been lost to history.

The Brazilian-born Dumont was both an innovator and a showman. In the waning days of the 19th century, he dazzled Paris by piloting the first practical motorized dirigibles around the Eiffel Tower. After the Wrights’ Kitty Hawk triumph, Dumont turned to heavier-than-air craft with an artistic flourish.

His 1908 model, the dragonflylike Demoiselle, is considered the prototype of the single-engine plane. Many consider Dumont far more influential and innovative than the Wrights, whose essential plane design changed little after their initial success.

A dreamer and idealist, Dumont never patented his aircraft. He saw aviation as a means of bringing mankind closer together.

He considered aircraft to be his children. After a crash left him unable to fly, he fell into depression. The use of aircraft in World War I and subsequent conflicts pushed him over the edge of despair.

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