Harriet Quimby in a Bleriot monoplane. |
Harriet Quimby was one of a
kind—actress, journalist, screenwriter,
pioneer aviatrix, barnstormer before there was a word for
it, and a colorful, defiant independent woman with a dash of style. She was Nellie
Bly crossed with Amelia Earhart,
and a dash of the self-promoting
feminist pioneer Victoria Claffin
Woodhull thrown in for good measure.
Quimby
was born to a farm family in Arcadia,
Michigan on May 11, 1875. Twelve
years later she relocated to the San
Franciso Bay area in California.
Little is known of her early life as she purposefully tried to obscure
it. She would later claim that she had
been born to a wealthy family in Arroyo
Grande, California on May 1,
1884—not the last time she would re-invent herself.
1900
found 25 year old Quimby listed in the Census
for San Francisco City as an actress living alone. No credits for any theater roles have ever
been found, but in those days the term was often used for the dancers in waterfront dives many of whom doubled as prostitutes—not that there is any proof that she did that,
either. She was a remarkably attractive
woman was almost black hair, expressive eyes, and evidently quite
charming. Her most apparent source of
income became as a writer, contributing short pieces and reviews and reviews
for Bay Area publications.
In
1903, clipping in hand, her experience as an “actress” Quimby crossed the
continent to New York City, waltzed
into the offices of Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly, a popular women’s
magazine and charmed her way into a job.
She was put on as theater critic but
was soon reviewing entertainments of all sorts, including the infant films being shown in Nickelodeons.
As
the films became more sophisticated, so did her interest. Through an old friend from San Francisco, actress Linda Advinson, Quimby got to know her
husband, pioneer director D.W. Griffith. He
was impressed enough by her to hire her as a screen writer for Biograph
Pictures. She wrote seven film shorts
for him, featuring early Biograph stars Florence La Badie, Wilfred Lucas,
and Blanche Sweet and filmed at the company’s Chicago studio. She appeared in one the films
that were made between 1910 and 1912 and
perhaps was uncredited in others. Most of
these are lost films.
In
addition to her reviews, Quimby sought out new assignments from the magazine. She wrote articles on how women could be
independent—auto repairs, career tips, and tips on running a
household without being a slave. She
taught herself photography, an important skill for the highly illustrated
magazine and wrangle assignments in to Europe,
Mexico, Cuba, and Egypt.
All
the while she remained an independent woman.
She never married or became dependent on a man. At a time when it was still scandalous, she
drove her own car, smoked, and traveled the world unescorted. This is not to say that as an attractive
woman she did not attract attention and welcome it as long as no strings were attached. She was making a decent living and enjoying
the modicum of celebrity that came with being a prolific writer.
A
magazine assignment in October of 1910 changed Quimby’s life. She set out to photograph the Belmont Park International Aviation
Tournament on Long Island, and
met John Moisant, a well-known
aviator and operator of a flight school, and his sister Matilde. She was immediately
smitten with aviation and convinced Moisant to take her on as a student,
joining Matilde who had already done some flying. Since the Moisant’s were French, she was taught in a Blériot
monoplane instead of the rickety Wright or Curtis bi-planes flown by most American pilots. The lessons
continued under Moisant’s brother Alfred
when John was killed in a crash. Quimby was a quick study—and perhaps a
little competitive.
Somehow
word of her training “leaked” to the press—three
guesses on the suspected leaker—creating a flurry of publicity. Quimby began to write about her
experiences. On August 1, 1911she somehow
leaped over Matilde and was granted License
#37 from Aero Club of America,
the U.S. affiliate of the International
Aeuronautic Federation which granted international
pilot’s licenses. That made her the first American woman licensed as a
pilot and the second woman in the world behind the Baroness de la Roche in France. Matilde Moisant, who may have been a little
miffed at having been run around, soon became the second female American pilot.
With
the considerable publicity surrounding her training and obtaining a license, Quimby
decided to launch a tour “exhibiting myself” and her flying across the U.S. and
into Mexico. Crowds clamored to see the
beautiful and glamourous aviatrix. And
she knew how to charm them. Quimby
designed her own unique flying outfit, plum-colored wool-backed satin, with a
cowl hood that was tailored enough to show off her curves. Not for her either aping the gear of male
flyers or going up, as some early women pilots had, in impractical volumous
skirts. At each stop she made herself
available to the press and could always be counted on for a clever quote.
Quimby in her purple flying suit in a Vin Fiz soda poster. |
Despite
her success Quimby knew that to achieve real respect as a pilot and be more
than simply a novelty, she had to establish some sort of flying record. She set her sights on being the first woman
to fly across the English Channel. When Miss
Trehawke-Davis flew across as a passenger, she knew it was only a matter of
time before some European female flyer would attempt to pilot the crossing.
With
unaccustomed secrecy, lest word of her coming spur others to make the trip
first, Quimby sailed to England. Once there she talked Louis Blériot, who was the first person
to fly across the Channel in 1909, to loan her one of famous monoplanes.
On
April 16, 1912 Quimby took off from Dover,
flying roughly the same route as Blériot but in reverse she set out for Calais.
There was a heavy overcast over the Channel that day and she had to
navigate solely by compass. It took her 59 minutes to make the
crossing in her 50 hp plane. She came
safely to earth 25 miles south of Calais on a beach at Hardelot-Plage with hardly a drop of fuel. She had won her treasured record.
She
did not attract quite all of the hoopla that ordinarily surrounded such early
aviation feats because of a sad accident of the calendar. Her flight took place the day after the Titanic
sank when papers on both sides of the Atlantic were dedicated almost
exclusively to the tragedy and would remain so for days. All Quimby’s accomplishment could muster were
articles buried deep in newspaper pages.
Still,
by spring of 1912 Quimby was one of the most famous women in America. When pilot Calbraith Perry Rodgers was killed in an April crash of his plane, the Vin Fiz
J. Ogden Armour of the meatpacking
family hired Quimby and her fortuitously purple suit to endorse his brand
of grape soda. She was featured in color posters in drug store
soda fountains and in a magazine
advertising campaign.
Upon
arrival back in the states and with the sponsorship of Vin Fiz Quimby launched
herself in a new and lucrative tour of the now popular air meets, rallies, and exhibitions
popping up all around the country.
On
July 1, 1912 Quimby flew in the Third
Annual Boston Aviation Meet at Squantum,
Massachusetts, an event unsanctioned
by the Aero Club of America which could
technically have cost her license. But
the appearance fee was handsome and Quimby was glad to lend a hand in promoting
the event. Early in the day she took off
with show manager William Willard as
a passenger in her new two-seat Bleriot monoplane for the benefit of the
press. Rising to an altitude of about
3,000 feet she flew out to Boston Light
in Boston Harbor then returned and
circled the airfield where a good size crowd was now in attendance.
Then
suddenly as the plane descended to about 1,500 feet it suddenly shuddered and
pitched forward tumbling Willard out of his seat and to his death. Seconds later Quimby fell after him. The plane itself recovered from whatever had happened
and continued to fly, gliding down to what would have been a survivable landing. Her career as a pilot ended with her death
only 9 months after it had begun.
The
cause of the sudden lurch remains one of aviation’s great mysteries. Some conjecture that a cable supporting the
wing may have snapped and fouled the engine.
Others thin that Willard, a rather large man may have suddenly shifted
his weight in his seat unbalancing the aircraft. Almost all agree that if the pilot and
passenger had been strapped into their seats, they would not have fallen out and
most likely have walked away from a hard landing.
across
the country. She was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, and then was moved to Kenisco Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.
But
fame is fleeting and hers faded from memory.
She was most celebrated back in her home state of Michigan—the place she
felt she had escaped from and actually denied.
A historic marker stands in
front of the abandoned family home in Arcadia and another in the southern
Michigan town of Coldwater. Her grave in Valhalla is graced with a
bronze plaque with a reproduction of her monoplane and a description of her
life and achievement. Perhaps her
greatest memorial lived on in the inspiration she was to other female pilots—especially
Amelia Earhart who idolized her as a girl.
As memorialized by the Postal Service in 1991 |
Interest
Quimby has lately revived. In 1991 she
was pictured in what is surely the only glamor
shot on an airmail stamp honoring
pioneer aviators by the by the United
State Postal Service. In 2012 she
was inducted into the Long Island Air
and Space Hall of Fame. She was the
subject of a biography by Giacinta
Bradley Koontz which also included numerous photographs, press clippings,
and memorabilia recently discovered. A descendent company of Biograph Pictures,
the company she worked for with D. W. Griffith is said to be in development of
a bio pic with Donnamarie Recco in the title role.
Most
remarkably of all, the wreckage plane the Quimby died piloting seems to have
been found, discovered in a New
Hampshire barn during the 1960’s.
The serial number of the Blériot XI monoplane and the registration number
matched the one Quimby was believed to be flying. The aircraft has been meticulously restored
to flying condition and is on display at Old
Rhinebeck Aerodrome, an aviation museum in Red Hook, New York. The
plane is the second oldest in existence still airworthy.
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