HEAVIER THAN AIR
 
 
Capt. Thomas Baldwin
 
 
Captain Baldwin in his "Red Devil" in 1912
Glenn Curtiss in the background
Collection of Walter E. Lees
 
 
NEW YORK HOSTS AIR MEET - 1910
     New York played host to twenty-seven of the world's leading flyers at the Belmont Park racetrack on Long Island. Momentarily at least, the pendulum of activity seemed to be swinging back to America.
     A total of $72,300 in prize money was a stake -- of which $10,000 was earmarked for the winner of a race around the Statue of Liberty.Top billing, however, was given to the second contest for the Gordon Bennett trophy.
     Charles K. Hamilton entered his Hamiltonian - biplane modeled on the Curtiss and powered by an eight-cylinder, 110-hp motorcar engine designed by Walter Christie.
     Captain Thomas Baldwin appeared with the Red Devil, constructed on the same order.
 

 
 
Harvard-Boston's Great Aero Meet - Boston, Mass. Aug 19, 1910
Daily Journal and Tribune, Knoxville, Tennessee:
August 19, 1910,
Via email from Bob Davis - 9-2-03
     "No aviation meet held in this country and probably none yet held in the world has had such a representative list of aviators as is assured in the Harvard-Boston aero meet, September 3 to September 13, according to the list of entrants to date announced tonight. The entry list is truly international and includes seventeen individual aviators and eleven types of air navigating machines. There is certain to be keen competition for the $40,000 hung up as prizes in a dozen events. The entrants follow:
 
  Walter Brookins
Arthur Johnson
Glenn H. Curtiss
Charles F. Willard
M. Didier Masson
A.V. Roe,
J. Graham White
William M. Hilliard
J. M. All_as
Ernest P. Lincoln,
Clifford D. Harmon
Capt. Thomas Baldwin
Jacques Delesseps
Dr. W. P. Christmas,
John G. Stratton
Horace F. Kearner
Greely S. Curtis
Wright biplanes
Wright biplanes
Curtiss biplanes
Curtiss biplanes
Vendome aeroplane
Roe Triplane
Farman biplane & Bleriot monoplane
Herring-Burgess biplane
Harvard biplane
 
 
 
 
Christmas biplane
Burgess-Curtiss aeroplane
Pfitzer monoplane
Bleriot monoplane
 

 
 
Tom Baldwin & Red Devil
 
 
Tom Baldwin and his Red Devil
Photo Courtesy of Roy Nagl
Ancient Aviators Website
 
 
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
SPONSORS DEMONSTRATION, 1910
     The Post-Dispatch decided to attempt a demonstration, to the people of St. Louis, that aviation was a reality. Clifford Harmon, an Eastern amateur flyer, was invited to come here and make a flight along the river front, for a prize to be offered by this newspaper.
     Officials of the air meet co-operated in the plan, though it had an element of risk, for another failure might have killed the prospects of the meet scheduled for the following month. Harmon agree to come here, and sent Capt. Tom Baldwin, noted acrobat and professional hot-air balloon jumper, here to look over the ground.
     For some reason, Harmon appeared to lose interest in the matter. "Never mind," said Capt. Baldwin, when he reported this condition of affairs. "If Harmon doesn't fly, I will." He meant it and presently he brought to St. Louis his "Red Devil" airplane, a heavy and clumsy-looking affair which resembled a farmer's wagon more than it resembled the neat machines which Curtiss had displayed.
     But it would fly, and it did fly, with the stout and middle-aged Baldwin in it, the afternoon of Sept. 10, 1910. The starting point was a field between Calvary Cemetary and the river, and the route was down the Mississippi to Carondelet. A large part of the city's population saw the flight, thousands of persons standing on Eads Bridge and cheering wildly as Baldwin flew over the bridge. He was not expected to return by air, but he did so, and electrified the spectators by flying under the east span of Eads Bridge at 50 miles an hour, and under McKinley Bridge. This scooting under bridges was a feat of pure dare-deviltry and has not been performed here since, so far as is now recalled, by any flyer in an airplane without a boat attached.
     The Baldwin demonstration entirely changed the views of St. Louisans about aviation, and made it certain that the meet, the following month, would be a success from the start.
From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Sunday, September 30, 1923
 

 
 
THOMAS BALDWIN TOURS JAPAN
     On April 23, 1911, Captain Yoshitoshi Tokugawa, a twenty-seven-year-old first lieutenant in the Japanese engineer corps, set a Japanese record with the Blériot, flying 48 miles in 1 hour 9 minutes 30 seconds. These pioneer flights antedated by many months the appearances of Thomas Baldwin and other American flyers who began touring Japan for exhibition purposes in the latter part of 1911.
 
WALTER LEES REMEMBERS CAPTAIN TOM, 1916
     Captain Tom was a wonderful man and it was a pleasure to work for and with him. However, he had his pecularities like we all have. For example, he wouldn't attend the funerals of any of the boys that were killed. He told me confidentially that he just couldn't take it.
     Once my wife and I had him out to dinner at the Pressey residence. Loa had prettied up the table very nice with flowers, a centerpiece, etc. Capt. didn't seem to notice it, and had only been there a few minutes when he exploded with, "Well, when do we eat. I came here to eat." He was a lovable character, even though rough in his talk at times.
Selections from Walter Lee's Journal
 

 
 
Tom Baldwin & Red Devil
 
 
Red Devil at Erie
Collection of Tim McLaughlin,
 
 
Tom Baldwin & Red Devil
 
 
Wreck of Red Devil at Erie
Collection of Tim McLaughlin,
 

 
 
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