38 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News • MAY 2014
T
he U.S. Navy, and the aero-
nautic fi eld in general, has
benefi ted enormously from
the genius of more than one
Sperry. Lawrence Burst Sperry, the sec-
ond son and third child of gyrocompass
inventor Elmer A. Sperry was a pioneer
in instrumental fl ight and famous in-
ventor in his own right, launching the
Lawrence Sperry Aircraft Co. at 26, and
earning 23 patents before his untimely
death at the age of 31 in 1923. Avia-
tion promoter and Air Service General
Billy Mitchell lauded him as one of the
most brilliant minds and greatest devel-
opers in the world of aviation, while one
newspaper called him “Uncle Sam’s
youngest technical expert and aviator.”
It was no exaggeration.
Like his father before him, Sperry’s
engineering brilliance more than made
up for his lack of a college degree, and
he too achieved acclaim in his early 20s
as an innovator and inventor, primarily
in aviation.
The youngest licensed pilot in the
country, Lawrence fi rst gained fame as
the inventor of the autopilot, a small gy-
roscopic stabilizer for planes that con-
trolled the three axes of fl ight — yaw,
pitch and roll —to maintain course and
altitude.
Most ships today still use a Sperry-
type stabilizer to dampen rolling, along
with some version of a Sperry autopilot
linked to a Sperry gyrocompass.
He also invented the artifi cial hori-
zon; a turn and bank indicator; the fi rst
amphibious fl ying boat; an airspeed
indicator, a drift indicator, a signifi -
cant improvement over the liquid-fi lled
magnetic compass and a parachute pack
– inventions that formed the basic in-
struments of all manner of planes and
most of which remain in use today.
A font of ideas, Sperry also tackled
night fl ying issues and built the fi rst
wheeled retractable landing gear in an
amphibian. That got him a splash in the
March 29, 1915 The Aerial Age Weekly.
But it was his performance at French
air competition for plane safety in 1914
that turned him into an international star
overnight and netted a $10,000 prize.
With his parent looking on, the 22-year-
old Sperry and his mechanic wowed the
crowd, which included military observ-
ers, by walking out on the wings of the
plane while it was aloft, to demonstrate
his autopilot technology. Sperry, with
his hands up in the air, offered a whole
new take on “Look Ma, no hands!,” to
an incredulous crowd.
By 1916, Lawrence was a commis-
sioned junior lieutenant in the U.S.
Navy and assigned as a fl ight instruc-
tor. A brief stint on active duty in 1918
was cut short by emergency surgery,
enabling him to continue his focus on
innovation. He was the fi rst civilian to
join the Navy Flying Corps Reserve in
1917.
Working with his father, Elmer A., the
two developed one of the earliest drones
– an unpiloted aircraft that could fl y to
a target guided, once again, by Sperry
Sr.’s gyroscopic device. Despite some
initial interest and funding from the
Navy, however, uneven test results and
trips back to the drawing board led the
Sperry’s Companies
Inventor-entrepreneur Elmer A. Sperry was fond of launching new companies to manufacture
new inventors and support his wide ranging interests, at times folding, morphing or selling off
older companies even as he was forming new ones. He is perhaps most closely associated
with the Sperry Gyroscope Co.:
Sperry Electric Light, Motor, and Car Brake Co., founded at the age of 20 to manufac-
ture Sperry’s electric dynamos and arc lamp invention. (1880)
Sperry Electric Mining Machine Co. (1888)
The Elmer A. Sperry Co., for research and development work (1888)
Sperry Streetcar and Electric Railway Co., for electric streetcars and their components
(1894)
Chicago Fuse Wire Co., (1900); and separately established an electro chemical labora-
tory in Washington, DC. , where he discovered a process for recovering tin from scrap
metal.
Sperry Gyroscope Co. (1910), founded to manufacture navigation equipment, chiefl y
his own inventions – the marine gyrostabilizer and the gyrocompass. During World War
I the company diversifi ed into aircraft components, such as bomb sights, fi re control
systems, airplane stabilizers and autopilot.
Sperry Development Co. (1926), Sperry Products Inc. and Sperry Rail Service - all as-
sociated with his rail detector and diesel engine products.
The Sperry companies that remained, including the Lawrence Sperry Aircraft Co., eventually
became the Sperry Corp. several years after the deaths of both Elmer Sperry and his son
Lawrence, with the maritime sector spinning off into Sperry Marine in 1997, which eventually
became part of Northrup Grumman Corp., a worldwide supplier of navigation, communication,
information and automation systems for commercial marine and naval markets.
Also a member of many engineering, aeronautical, maritime, industry and other scientifi cally-
oriented organizations, Sperry founded at least two:
Founder and charter member of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers
Founder and charter member of the American Electro-Chemical Society
He was also an inaugural member and eventual chairman of the U.S. Naval Consulting Board,
which was formed in 1915 by the Secretary of the Navy with help from Thomas Edison.
MR’S 75TH ANNIVERSARY
(Photo: Hagley Museum and Library)
Lawrence Burst
Sperry
Aviator & Engineer
A chip off the old block makes aeronautics his claim to fame
By Patricia Keefe
MR #5 (32-41).indd 38 4/29/2014 12:18:31 PM
Digital Wave Publishing