SUBJECT: AERO CLUB IN THE MID 1850's                         FILE: UFO2868


PART 1

                             Taken from KeelyNet BBS
                          Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
                                   PO BOX 1031
                               Mesquite, TX 75150

                      There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
                 on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
                      files on KeelyNet except where noted!

                                October 29, 1991

                                    AERO1.ASC
      --------------------------------------------------------------------
        We have  been looking for tangible information on the Aero Club of
              California as it existed in the mid 1850's for years.
           In a discussion with one of  our  users,  Mr.  Jim  Shaffer, he
             remembered that he had an article on that very subject
                 and took the time to type it in and send it up.
                                Thank you JIM!!!
              This EXCELLENT file shared with KeelyNet courtesy of
                                  Jim Shaffer.
      --------------------------------------------------------------------
          Fate magazine has been in existence for many years and covers
                  a wide range of subjects, much like KeelyNet.

          If you  might be interested in subscribing to  this  interesting
                    journal, their mailing address, etc..is:

                                      FATE
                                  PO BOX 64383
                         St. Paul, Minnesota 55164-0383



      --------------------------------------------------------------------

      from Fate, May 1973

                   Mystery Airships of the 1800's (Part 1 of 3)

      Part One:  "No  form  of  dirigible  or heavier-than-air machine was
                  flying -- or could fly -- at this time."  And yet...

      By Jerome Clark and Loren Coleman

      March 26, 1880 was a quiet Friday  night  in tiny Galisteo Junction,
      N. Mex. (now the town of Lamy).  The train from nearby  Santa Fe had
      come and gone  and  the  railroad  agent,  his  day's work finished,
      routinely locked up the depot and  set  out with a couple of friends
      for a short walk.

      Suddenly they heard voices which seemed to be coming  from  the sky.
      The men looked  up  to  see  an object, "monstrous in size," rapidly
      approaching from the  west,  flying   so  low  that  elegantly-drawn
      characters could be  discerned  on  the  outside  of   the  peculiar
      vehicle.  Inside, the  occupants,  who  numbered 10 or so and looked
      like ordinary human beings, were laughing and shouting in an

                                     Page 1

      unfamiliar language and  the  men  on  the  ground  also heard music
      coming from the craft.  The craft itself was "fish-shaped" -- like a
      cigar with a tail -- and it was driven by a huge "fan" or propeller.

      As it passed overhead one of the occupants  tossed some objects from
      the car.  The depot agent and his friends recovered one item almost
      immediately, a beautiful flower with a slip of fine silk-like paper
      containing characters which  reminded  the men of designs  they  had
      seen on Japanese chests which held tea.

      Soon thereafter the  aerial  machine ascended and sailed away toward
      the east at high speed.

      The next morning searchers found a cup -- one of the items the
      witnesses had seen thrown out of  the  craft  but had been unable to
      locate in the darkness.

      "It is of very peculiar workmanship," the _Santa Fe Daily New
      Mexican_ reported, "entirely different to anything used in this
      country."

      The depot agent took the cup and the flower and put them on display.
      Before the day  was  over, however, this physical  evidence  of  the
      passage of the early unidentified object had vanished.

      In the evening   a   mysterious   gentleman  identified  only  as  a
      "collector of curiosities" appeared  in  town,  examined  the finds,
      suggested they were Asiatic in origin and offered such  a  large sum
      of money for  them  that the agent had no choice but to accept.  The
      "collector" scooped up his purchases and never was seen again.
      --------------------------------------------------------------------
      Vangard note.......

           We found  more  on  this  interesting   case   in   a  doctoral
           dissertation by Mr. T. E. Bullard, published in  1982 under the
           name of  "Mysteries  in  the  Eye of the Beholder."  Chaper X -
           Loose in an Airship - The Age  of  Phantom Dirigibles and Ghost
           Airplanes, 1880-1946.

           Page 205

           "Several precocious  flying  machines sailed the  skies  during
            1880.  In late March several citizens of the unlikely place of
            Galisteo Junction, New Mexico heard voices overheard and saw a
            fish-shaped balloon driven by a fan-like apparatus.

            A cup  and  several  other  artifacts fell from the ship as it
            passed, but the next day a  collector  of  curiosities,  a man
            unknown in town, appeared and paid a large  sum  of  money for
            the items.

            The story ends on this note of mystery, BUT THE FOLLOWING WEEK
            another installment CLARIFIED THESE STRANGE PROCEEDINGS.

            A party  of  tourists  which included a wealthy young Chinaman
            stopped in the vicinity and  found  the  stranger  engaged  in
            archaeological work.  The young man grew excited on seeing the
            articles dropped from the airship, because  among  among  them
            was a note in his fiancee's hand, and he explained that

                                     Page 2

            CHINESE EXPERIMENTS  IN  FLYING HAD AT LAST SUCCEEDED, meaning
            the airship which crossed the  skies  of Galisteo Junction was
            THE FIRST FLIGHT OF a CHINA-TO-AMERICA airline.

      --------------------------------------------------------------------

      Of course the story of aviation does not begin on December 17, 1903,
      the date of  Orville Wright's 12-second aerial hop  at  Kitty  Hawk.
      Long before that  scientists  and  inventors had struggled to unlock
      the secrets of powered flight and  to  build  what  an 1897 issue of
      _Scientific American_ called the "true flying machine;  that is, one
      which is hundreds of times heavier than the air upon which it rests,
      (and flies) by  reason  of its dynamic impact, and not by the aid of
      any balloon or gasbag whatsoever."

      But nothing in the early history  of  flight  tells  us  what a huge
      airborne cigar was doing over New Mexico in 1880, especially  as  it
      "appeared to be  entirely  under the control of the occupants and...
      guided by a large fan-like apparatus,"  and  also  could ascend with
      startling speed.

      Its "monstrous size"  and  its  propeller  clearly indicate  it  was
      heavier than air,  but  such  a  flying  machine  didn't  then exist
      according to British authority Charles  H. Gibbs-Smith: "Speaking as
      an aeronautical historian  who  specializes  in the  periods  before
      1910, I can  say  with  certainty  that  the only airborne vehicles,
      carrying passengers, which could possibly have been seen anywhere in
      North America... were free-flying  spherical  balloons,  and  it  is
      highly unlikely for these to be mistaken for anything else.  No form
      of dirigible (i.e., a gasbag propelled by an airscrew)  or  heavier-
      than-air flying machine  was  flying  -- or indeed *could* fly -- at
      this time in America."

      Nevertheless, mysterious "airships"  were  seen in many parts of the
      world in the last half of the 19th Century and the  early  years  of
      the 20th.  And  plans  for  the  construction of such craft were not
      unknown.

      In 1848 gold  fever  seized  America.    On  January  24  a  workman
      discovered the precious metal in Sutter's millrace in California's
      Sacramento Valley.  Within weeks the entire Pacific coast knew about
      it and a  few  months  later  "gold"  was  on  the tongue  of  every
      easterner who ever dreamed of easy fortune.

      Getting to those  goldfields, however, was a problem, for the inland
      parts of the young nation were largely unsettled.  A unique solution
      -- air travel  -- came from "R. Porter  &  Company,"  a  firm  which
      listed its address as Room 40 of the Sun Building in  New York City.
      In the latter  part  of  1848 the company distributed an advertising
      flyer in the eastern United States  which promised more than it ever
      delivered.

      Touting "THE BEST ROUTE TO THE CALIFORNIA GOLD!" the  flyer  read in
      part that the   company   was   "making   active   progress  in  the
      construction of an 'Aerial Transport'  for  the  express  purpose of
      carrying passengers between New York and California.

      "It is expected to put this machine in operation about the first
      of April, 1849, and the transport is expected to make a trip to the

                                     Page 3

      gold region and back in seven days..."

      On the flyer the "aerial locomotive" is illustrated -- a huge cigar-
      shaped device, identified  as  a  "gasbag,"  with a tail.  Under it,
      attached with "sturdy  material   arrows   can't   puncture,"  is  a
      similarly-shaped car with windows in its midsection.

      "Snug gondola with benches for 50 or more passengers,"  the  caption
      reads.  From the  top  of the gondola stretches a long pipe which is
      identified as "a  steam  engine for  controlled  propulsion  through
      sunny skies at 60 miles the hour."

      Except for this pipe, entrepreneur Porter's vessel  is almost a dead
      ringer for the type of "UFO" widely reported in the late 1800's and
      early 1900's which   came  to  be  called  "the  airship,"  although
      obviously there had to be more than one of them and they did not all
      look alike.  But in the advertisement  of an obscure company lie the
      first hints of  a  bizarre  mystery  which  is  staggering   in  its
      implications. *

       * [We do not pretend to "solve" this mystery.  What we offer
          instead are  possibilities  suggested  by  a wide range of often
          conflicting evidence  complicated   by   the  distance  in  time
          separating us from the events described (which  makes  firsthand
          investigation impossible in all but rare instances).]

      During the 1850's  mysterious "airships" regularly crossed the skies
      of Germany and just before that,  probably  in  the  year  1848,  an
      enigmatic young German  named C. A. A. Dellschau immigrated  to  the
      United States.

      Dellschau's own testimony  places him in Sonora, a California mining
      town, in the 1850's.  Where he might  have been in the decades after
      that is unknown.  We do know, however, that about  the  turn  of the
      century he married  a  widow and took up residence in Houston, Tex.,
      where he lived in virtual seclusion.   He  had  no  friends;  by all
      accounts his quarrelsome disposition kept everyone at a distance.

      Dismissed as an eccentric by the few who knew him Dellschau  devoted
      hours to the  compilation  of  a  series  of  scrapbooks filled with
      clippings, drawings and cryptic notations.   He  died in 1924 at the
      age of 92.

      Were it not for a chance discovery many years later Dellschau's life
      would have gone  unnoticed.   But  one day in May 1969  a  UFOlogist
      named P. G.  Navarro  happened to stroll past an aviation exhibit at
      the University of  St.  Thomas in  Houston.   Two  large  scrapbooks
      (Dellschau's) caught his eye and he stopped to take a closer look.

       * [In telephone conversations and by correspondence, Navarro
          himself has provided us with this information.]

      He found that the scrapbooks contained old news stories and articles
      about attempts of  various  inventors to construct  heavier-than-air
      flying machines.  But  these  were  not  nearly  so  interesting  as
      Dellschau's drawings of strange-looking, cumbersome vessels which he
      claimed *actually had been flown at one time*.

      Navarro, his curiosity aroused, sought more of the scrapbooks and

                                     Page 4

      over a period of time acquired 10 more -- from such places as a junk
      shop in Houston  and  from  a  woman  art  collector  who  had  been
      interested in Dellschau's strange drawings.

      Navarro even talked  with  Dellschau's  stepdaughter,  then  an  old
      woman.  Finally he set out to makes sense of Dellschau's notes which
      had been penned in English, German and code.  When  he  had finished
      he had reconstructed an incredible story.

      One thing was obvious:  Dellschau was of two minds about what he was
      doing.  On one  hand  he wanted his "secrets" known; on the other he
      seemed afraid to speak directly.   So  he compromised and wrote in a
      fashion aimed to discourage all but the most determined investigator
      -- and even so his writings in the main only add to the mystery.

      He was writing for an audience -- if not one in his  own day, one in
      some future period.  He addressed potential readers thus:

           "You will... Wonder Weaver... you will unriddle these writings.
            They are  my  stock  of open knowledge.  They... will end like
            all the others...  with good intentions but too weak-willed to
            assign and put to work."

      From the notes Navarro learned that  in  the  1850's Dellschau and a
      group of associates,  about 60 in all, gathered in  Sonora,  Calif.,
      where they formed  an  "Aero Club" and constructed and flew heavier-
      than-air vehicles.  They worked in  an  open  field near Columbia, a
      small town near Sonora.  (Today an airstrip covers  the  field,  the
      only area in  the  predominantly  hilly region where planes can take
      off and land safely.)

      The club worked in secrecy and its  members  were  not  permitted to
      talk about their  activities or to use the aircraft  for  their  own
      purposes.  One member  who  threatened  to  take  his machine to the
      public in the hope of making a fortune died in an aerial explosion -
      - the victim, Dellschau hints, of murder.

      Another, a "high educated mechanic" identified as Gustav Freyer, was
      called to account  by  the  club for  withholding  new  information.
      Apparently this was no ordinary social group.

      The "Aero Club"  was  a  branch  of  a larger secret  society  whose
      initials Dellschau gives  as  "NYMZA."   He  says  little about this
      society except to observe that in  1858  it  was  headed by a George
      Newell in Sonora.

      Otherwise he alludes  to  orders  from  unnamed superiors  who  were
      overseeing the club's   activities.   These  were  not  governmental
      authorities, for Dellschau  writes  that  an  official  who  somehow
      learned of their  work  once approached club members  and  tried  to
      persuade them to  sell  their  inventions for use as weapons of war.
      The unnamed superiors instructed the club to refuse the offer.

      The club had a number of aircraft  at  its disposal, including among
      others August Schoetler's Aero Dora, Robert Nixon's  Aero  Rondo and
      George Newell's Aero  Newell.  However, from Dellschau's drawings it
      is hard to  believe that anything  resembling  these  machines  ever
      could have flown.


                                     Page 5

      Navarro remarks, "The  heavy  body  of  the  machines  seems  to  be
      radically out of  proportion to  the  gasbag  or  balloon  which  is
      supposed to lift the contraption.  Considering the  large  amount of
      gas (usually hydrogen  or  helium)  that  is required to lift one of
      today's dirigibles or even a small  blimp,  it is inconceivable that
      the small quantity  of  gas  used  in Dellschau's airship  would  be
      sufficient to lift it."

      But this wasn't  ordinary  gas.   According  to  Dellschau  it was a
      substance called "NB" which had the  capacity  to  "negate  weight."
      Incredible as it may seem he is talking about antigravity.

      Dellschau's notes have  a curiously pessimistic tone.   One  strange
      paragraph reads, "We  are  all  together  in  our  graves.   We  get
      together in my house.  We eat and  drink  and  are  joyful.   We  do
      mental work, but  everybody  is  forlorn,  as  they  feel  they  are
      fighting a losing  battle.  But little likelihood is there that fate
      shall bring forth the right man."

      Dellschau wrote of the human race -- and even the planet Earth -- as
      if he stood apart from it.  One  peculiar  paragraph  of  his  oddly
      archaic German reads:    "Your  Christian  love  reaches   for   the
      Wanderplace, and wanders  away from Earth.  Planets there are enough
      where Christian love shall be as  we  say  so  nicely  in  the  Book
      Selag."

      A drawing elsewhere shows the figure of a devil opening  a  crack in
      the fabric of  the  sky  above  one  of  the  "Aeros."   The overall
      impression conveyed by his writings  is that Dellschau was a man who
      knew secrets that  would  render  him forever an outsider,  isolated
      from the community of mankind.

      Who was he?   A  spinner  of tall tales?  But to what end?  If he is
      only that why did he spend years compiling the scrapbooks - devoting
      most of his waking hours to the task - on the slight chance that one
      day far in the future, long after  his death, someone might be taken
      in?

      On November 1, 1896, the _Detroit Free Press_ reported  that  in the
      near future a New York inventor would construct and fly an "aerial
      torpedo boat."  And on November 17 the _Sacramento Bee_ reprinted a
      telegram the newspaper  had received from a New York man who said he
      and some friends would board an airship  of his invention and fly it
      to California.  The trip, he said, would take no more than two days.
      That very night all hell broke loose and the Great  Airship Scare of
      1896-97 was off and running.

      The next day the _Bee_ led off a long article with this paragraph:

            "Last evening  between  the hours of six and seven o'clock, in
             the year of our Lord eighteen  hudred  and ninety-six, a most
             startling exhibition  was seen in the sky  in  this  city  of
             Sacramento.

             People standing  on  the  sidewalks  at certain points in the
             city between the hours stated,  saw  coming  through  the sky
             over the housetops, what appeared to them  to  be  merely  an
             electric arc lamp propelled by some mysterious force.


                                     Page 6

             It came  out  of  the  east  and  sailed  unevenly toward the
             southwest, dropping now nearer to the earth, and now suddenly
             rising into the air again as  if  the force that was whirling
             it through  space  was sensible of the dangers  of  collision
             with objects upon the earth..."

      Hundreds of persons  saw it. Those who got the closest look said the
      object was huge and cigar-shaped and  had  four large wings attached
      to an aluminum  body.  Some insisted they heard voices  and  raucous
      laughter emanating from  the  ship.  A man identified as R. L. Lowry
      and a companion allegedly saw four  men  pushing the craft along the
      ground by its wheels.  Lowry's friends asked them  where  they  were
      going.  "To San Francisco," they replied.  "We hope to be there by
      midnight."

      One J. H.  Vogel,  who  was in the vicinity, confirmed the story and
      added that the  vessel  was  "egg-shaped."  The  next  afternoon  an
      airship passed over Oak Park, Calif., leaving a trail  of  smoke and
      soon San Francisco,  Oakland and other cities and town in the north-
      cantral part of  California  had   their  own  stories  in  all  the
      newspapers.

      Several persons now  stepped  forward to tell of earlier  sightings.
      One was a  fruit rancher near Bowman, Placer County, who said he and
      members of his family had watched  an airship fly by at 100 miles an
      hour in late October.

      Even more remarkable was the statement of a man who  claimed that in
      August he and  fellow  hunters  had  tracked  a  wounded deer across
      Tamalpais Mountain until they came  to a clearing where six men were
      working on an airship.

      The most baffling  part  of the whole flap, which lasted  well  into
      December 1896, was  the  role  of  "E. H. Benjamin," a dentist whose
      name the newspapers always enclosed  in  quotation marks, as if they
      had reason to doubt his identity.

      It was either  Benjamin  or  his uncle who that November  approached
      George D. Collins,   a  San  Francisco  lawyer,  and  asked  him  to
      represent his interests in the patenting of an airship.  He told the
      incredulous Collins that he had come  from Maine to California seven
      years before in order to conduct his experiments without  danger  of
      interruption.

      Collins told reporters  that  his  wealthy  client  (whom  he  never
      identified) did his work near Oroville  where  Collins  himself  had
      viewed the invention -- an enormous construction 150 feet long.  "It
      is built on the aeroplane system and has two canvas  wings  18  feet
      wide and rudder  shaped  like a bird's tail," the attorney said.  "I
      saw the thing ascend about 90 feet under perfect control."

      On November 17, Collins went on, the  airship had flown the 60 miles
      between Oroville and  Sacramento in 45 minutes.  This  was  not  the
      first flight the  inventor  had  made.   For  two  weeks he had been
      flying in attempts to perfect the craft's navigational apparatus.

      This led to  the  story in the _Sacramento  Bee_  for  November  23,
      datelined Oroville:  "The rumor that the airship which is alleged to
      have passed over Sacramento was constructed near this town seems to

                                     Page 7

      have a grain of truth in it.  The parties who could give information
      if they would  are extremely reticent.  They give evasive answers or
      assert they know absolutely nothing about it.

      "Not a single  person  that  saw   or   knew  of  an  airship  being
      constructed near here can be found and yet there  is  a  rumor  that
      some man has  been  experimenting  with  different  kinds of gas and
      testing those which are lighter than air.  The experiments were made
      some miles east of the town and no  one is able to give any names of
      the parties, who  are  evidently  strangers  and  seeking  to  avoid
      publicity."

      The _San Francisco  Call_  established  that "Benjamin," a native of
      Carmel, Me., had been seen in the  Orville  area  visiting a wealthy
      uncle and confiding to friends that he had invented  something which
      would "revolutionize the world."

      Several days into  the  controversy, the inventor dispensed with the
      services of lawyer Collins because he was talking too much.  W.  H.
      H. Hart, a former state attorney general and a highly respected man,
      took over Collins'  job.  In subsequent  newspaper  interviews  Hart
      revealed that *two* airships existed, one in the east  and the other
      in California.  "I  have been concerned in the eastern invention for
      some time personally," he said.   "The  idea  is to consolidate both
      interests."

      The western craft would be used as a weapon of war.   "From  what  I
      have seen of  it,"  Hart  said,  "I have not the least doubt that it
      will carry four  men  and 1,000 pounds  of  dynamite.   I  am  quite
      convinced that two or three men could destroy the city  of Havana in
      48 hours."

      Hart thus represented  both airship inventors, one in California and
      one in New Jersey.  The former had Hart say, "...if the Cubans would
      give him $10 million he would wipe out the Spanish stronghold." This
      was not the last time airships and  Cuba*  would be mentioned in the
      same breath, as we shall see.

       * [In this period the then-new "yellow journalism" was keeping
          American public   opinion   aroused  over  Cuba's   desire   for
          independence.  After  the  Cuban  insurection  of  1895,  public
          sentiment was  running high against  Spain  and  the  mysterious
          destruction of the U. S. S. Maine in Havana harbor  on  February
          15, 1898, triggered the Spanish-American war.]

      Early in December   1896   a   stranger   appeared   at  a  business
      establishment in Fresno, Calif., and inquired for a George Jennings.
      Covered with dust, the man looked  as  if  he  had  traveled  a long
      distance.  When Jennings stepped out of a back room  he  greeted the
      visitor like an  old  friend.   The  two  men  engaged  in whispered
      conversation and the  persons standing  nearby  were  nonplussed  to
      overhear the word "airship" spoken more than once.

      Later Jennings talked  freely  to a reporter for the  _Fresno  Semi-
      Weekly Expositor_, balking only at giving his friends' name.

      "It is true  the airship is in Fresno County," he said.  "Just where
      I do not know myself.  It is also  true that the man who was in here
      a short time ago is one of the inventors.  He told me the trip to

                                     Page 8

      this country was  involuntary  upon  the  part  of  the  men  in the
      airship.

      In other words the machine came itself  and  they  couldn't stop it.
      (I was told)  that they were flying, as usual, around  Contra  Costa
      County hills and rose to a height of about 1,000 feet.  Suddenly the
      airship struck a  current  of  air  and  refused  to  answer  to its
      steering gear.  It was borne rapidly  southward  against all efforts
      to change its  course until suddenly the current of  air  seemed  to
      lessen and the  machine once more became manageable.  The men aboard
      at once descended and flew about looking  for  a hiding place, which
      they at length found."

      Jennings said he was sure that individuals in nearby  Watertown  and
      Selma must have  observed  the craft as it limped through the county
      in search of a "hiding place."   Sure  enough,  the  day  before his
      encounter with the aeronaut, the _San Francisco Call_  had published
      a letter from five Watertown men who said they had seen an enormous
      airship nearly collide  with  a  cornice  on  the city's post office
      building the evening of November  20.   The  craft had an "intensely
      brilliant" light and the witnesses could see human forms aboard.

      The evening of  December  5  Selma  citizens  were  treated  to  the
      unnerving spectacle of a low-flying brilliantly-illuminated object
      sailing rapidly toward the southeast.

      "The character of  the  witnesses  is such as to leave no doubt that
      they saw just   what   they  described,"   the   _Selma   Irrigator_
      editorialized.

      After the first  week  of  December  the  airships  seemed  to  have
      disappeared, the "inventors" were heard from no more and everything
      returned to normal -- but not for long.  The incredible part was yet
      to come.
      --------------------------------------------------------------------
      Vangard note...

           We are  looking  into  the  Dellschau  manuscripts  and further
           researches on this mysterious N.B. gas.

           From the work of Walter Russell  and  his  development  of  the
           Octave Periodic Progression of elements, there  would appear to
           be somewhere  on the order of 26 elements BELOW HYDROGEN.  This
           is TOTALLY CONTRARY to any modern understanding of chemistry.

           As we understand it, the N.B.  gas had incredible lifting power
           (not anti-gravity per se.).  An apt analogy would  be  that one
           could fill a basketball with the N.B. gas, hold it in your arms
           and be carried off into the upper stratosphere.

           When such  an understanding is applied to the majority of cases
           of the airships, it is seen how  they are identical to ships on
           water or  submarines  underwater.  A simple change  in  ballast
           would determine  the height to which the airship would rise and
           remain.  Subject of course to wind.

           When perusing the many fascinating  reports  from  this era, we
           note several describing winged men flying through the air.


                                     Page 9
           Some have  the equivalent of a backpack for thrust, some simply
           the wings.  N.B. could very well stand for Neutral Buoyancy.

                           SHADES OF THE ROCKETEER!!!

           Page 205 of Bullards book,

           On July 28th, around 6 to 7 AM?,  Two  Louisville, Kentucky men
           saw an  object in the distance which drew nearer  and  resolved
           into the appearance of a man surrounded by machinery.  (Note
           no gasbag or canopy supported by one)

           If the  man  slacked  his efforts (he was peddling) the machine
           dropped, but if he once again worked the treadles (peddles) and
           wings HE  ROSE  AGAIN; but the  machine  seemed  under  perfect
           control and executed a turn over the city.

           (Remember when the comedian Gallagher built and  flew a bicycle
            type device suspended from a small dirigible.)

           Page 206 of Bullards book,

           In September  an  object like a black-clad man WITH BAT'S WINGS
           AND FROGS LEGS FLAPPED over Coney Island.

           Can we not here clearly see that  the  use of N.B. gas could so
           balance or completely cancel one's weight that  flying  in  air
           would be  analogous  to  swimming  in water?  Is this not worth
           pursuing?  It would turn our  concept  of air travel completely
           upside down.

           Ninety percent  of  the problem with air travel  is  the  extra
           power required  to sustain lift.  Propulsion is a piece of cake
           in comparision.  Imagine airships  or  flying  suits  literally
           "floating" like boats on water..........

      --------------------------------------------------------------------



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