www.marinelink.com 39
(Photo: Hagley Museum and Library)
Elmer A. Sperry with his son, pilot Lawrence Burst Sperry, an inventor in his own
right, with 23 patents pending or granted, including one for a self-contained
parachute.
(Cr
edit: Library of Congr
ess )
Lawrence Sperry lands plane on Capitol steps in 1922 stunt to demand overdue
payment from the U.S. Navy.
military to shelve the idea. It wasn’t un-
til after their deaths, that interest in their
idea was rekindled, driven by the erup-
tion of WWII.
The Sperrys encountered similar luck
with another project they fi rst pitched
to the Navy in 1916 - “air bombs,” or
early guided torpedoes. “It’s easy to
imagine a fl eet of these weapons, loaded
with deadly gas or explosives, launched
against an objective without endangering
one human life of the side so employing
them,” explained Lawrence in papers
published in 1926 after his death. Even
though Lawrence’s company developed
and patented a remote radio-controlled
aerial Torpedo, and Elmer applied for a
patent on a radio-controlled aerial torpe-
do in December, 1917, this work too was
tabled by the Navy once the war ended.
Lawrence’s patent foresaw the needs of
modern cruise missiles, addressing in-
ternal guidance systems and post-launch
guidance, among other issues,
After the war, in 1919, Sperry built
two 48 ft. wingspan Land and Sea Tri-
plane Amphibians for the U.S. Navy for
coastal defense. With encouragement
from Gen. Mitchell, he also designed a
compact sport biplane for the Army Air
Service in 1921.
The Sperry Messenger ran on a 28
hp, 3-cylinder radial engine, had a 20-
ft. wingspan and could hit speeds of 95
miles per hour. His company also built
the Verville-Sperry Racer for the Air
Service featuring a retractable landing
gear and a clean wing design. It won the
1924 Pulitzer Trophy Race.
Nicknamed “Gyro,” Sperry was a
daredevil whose personally tested many
of his instruments and technologies,
included a public demonstration of his
self-packing parachute. According the
National Aviation Hall of Fame, Sperry
jumped out of a plane, “falling 2,000 feet
before pulling the rip cord. Unfortunate-
ly, winds carried him over downtown
Dayton [Ohio] and he landed on top of
its tallest building, as fi re engines rushed
to the scene. But when Lawrence calmly
jumped from the building and fl oated
safely to the ground, his father, an ardent
prohibitionist, deadpanned, “I think we
all need a drink!”
Other stunts included buzzing the
Capitol to disrupt Congress and land-
ing fi rst on the Capitol steps, and then
in front of the Lincoln Memorial before
storming into the U.S. Treasury to col-
lect money the government, which had
been slow in paying his company for
contracted work. Speaking of stunts, he
is also considered by some the found-
ing member of the “Mile High Club,”
in 1916 after he and a married woman
companion were fi shed out of the drink
off Long Island buck naked after their
plane crashed. Sperry famously claimed
the impact blew their clothes off, inspir-
ing an equally famous retort by one New
York newspaper, “Aerial Petting Leads
to Wetting.” He wasn’t so lucky in an-
other accident. Sperry was killed in a
plane crash over the North Seas in 1923
while fl ying in dense fog from England
to Holland in a plane he designed him-
self. Sperry is a member of the Naval
Aviation Hall of Honor and the National
Aviation Hall of Fame.
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