Bertram Ogilvie's Plane

Maker
Ogilvie, Bertram
Current rights
Public Domain
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Object detail

About this object
A photograph of Bertram Ogilvie's plane on a field preparing to go up the ramp for a flight attempt.

The photograph was taken in Riverbend Road, Napier, where Bertram Ogilvie and others were constructing and trialling aeronautical techniques from 1907 to 1911. There is a man in the image near the plane leaning under the wings examining them.

Bertram Ogilvie is thought to have been the first man to pilot a powered aeroplane in New Zealand. He was the inventor of the principle of ailerons. While an employee of the firm of Hawkins and Rome, engineers in Hastings, he pioneered the construction of an aeroplane which incorporated the principle of ailerons. Attempts to launch the machine into the air on the beach near Napier did not meet with success, but after further trials the machine was got into the air and the aileron principle proved a great success.

Photographer and exact date unknown.
This photograph was taken some time during these trials between 1907 and 1911.
Production technique
Media/Materials description
Black and white photograph glued onto card in an album. The album has a hard green linen cover with Sunny Memories printed on the front.
Measurements
Height x Width: 61 x 93mm
Height x Width: 182 x 137mm
Subject date
1907-1911
Credit Line
gifted by Mr L M Goodger
Other number(s)
10971, 5147, 629.13 Goo, 80919

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