WILLIAM TEMPLETON
 

 
 
I need a photo of him. If you can help, please contact me.
 
   

 
 
Canada's Pioneers
     An EB historian has been at work in Canada. The December 1939 issue of Canadian Aviation publishes little-known facts about Canadian pilot training in the "Last Great War," by Frank H. Ellis. This he follows with "Early Echoes" in the March 1940 issue.
     He mentions our own "Fritz" Ericson and the manufacture of "Canucks" (Curtiss JNs) in his yarn. And then publishes illustrations of scale models of the first six airplanes in Canada's history---the Red Wing, flown by "Casey" Baldwin at Lake Keuka, 1908; McCurdy's Silver Dart of 1909, the first airplane to be flown in Canada; a tractor biplane designed, built and flown in Vancouver (1910-11) by William Templeton, William McMullen and Winston Templeton; a Curtiss pusher purchased by EB William Stark, of Vancouver, and flow by him 1912-15; the two-seater, dual-controlled pusher biplane designed, built and flown by William A. Straith in Winnipeg prior to the last war and a single-seater Curtiss-type pusher constructed and flown by EB Author Frank H. Ellis and Thomas G. Blakely in Calgary, Alverta, 1914-15.
 
A CANADIAN HISTORY
     And then there is the detailed story "Pioneer Flying in British Columbia," again by Ellis, published at considerable length in the British Columbia Historical Quarterly for October, 1939
     Here is the full tale of every Early Bird who ever flew in British Columbia (1910-1914--- Charles K. Hamilton (with his Aerial Clipper), J. C. Mars (with his airship), Alys McKey, William Stark, John M. Bryant, William Templeton, Winston Templeton, C. F. Walsh, P. O. Parmalee, Clifford Turpin, James V. Martin, Glenn L. Martin and Weldon B. Cooke.
     With this start, one presumes he can depend on Author Ellis to complete the history of the pioneers of Canadian aeronautics.
     After that, there's the United States to be covered. Authors, arise!
from CHIRP - JULY 1940- DEARBORN MICH. - NUMBER 27
courtesy of Steve Remington - CollectAir
 

 
 
ONLINE RESOURCES
     If you search for "William Templeton" +aviation +Canada, using the Google search engine,
(5-30-08), you will find about 69 links, most of them relevant and worth visiting. Perhaps the most helpful is the following.
 

 
       This article was submitted by Phil Vogler and is a very important revue of the development of aviation in Canada. William Templeton is mentioned, as well as William McMullen and Winston Templeton. The most relative pagargraph is the following:

" The first aeroplane built and flown in Western Canada was a 35-40 hp. Anzani engine biplane constructed in 1910 from their own designs by William Templeton, William McMullen and Winston Templeton of Vancouver. A few successful short flights were made from the racetrack on Lulu Island, B. C."

     You can access the article by clicking on the title above.
 

 
 
RECOMMENDED READING
 
 
Canada's Flying Heritage
CANADA'S FLYING HERITAGE

 
by Frank Ellis
 
Product Details
Paperback: 398 pages; 10.9 x 8 x 0.9 inches
Publisher: University of Toronto Press; [2d ed.] edition (June 1, 1980)
List Price: $21.29
Used Price: $4.37
ISBN-10: 0802064175
ISBN-13: 978-0802064172
 
  Description:
This book not only records the significant events of Canadian aviation but also pays tribute to the 'forgotten flyers who flew by guess and by God or with calculating caution - for the sheer love of flying - in the early days.'

'Pioneers of the Air' recounts the first tentative experiments with that overgrown monster, the flying machine - at this stage, the glider. Next come the Barnstormers, the first professional airmen, trying desperately to wrest a living from the air, pioneering in the field of practical flying as little more than vaudeville performers. These were the days of daring aero-acrobatics and tense and crowded air-meets. The First World War saw a tremendous advance in technical manoeuvres and in pilot skill; the first aviation school was established in Toronto, where the War Birds learned to fly. An unparallelled boom in aviation followed the war. Public interest had been aroused by the celebrated achievement of Canada's Air Force, and many young men, the restlessness of the war still in them, were obsessed by the itch to fly again. The Dollar-a-Minute days marked the beginning of passenger travel and a steady increase in experimental flying, to bear its practical fruit in days to come. The next chapter is one of heroic enterprise - the conquest of the Atlantic and the spanning of the Continent. No less epic is the history of the bush pilots who tamed the Canadian North. We must be grateful to Mr. Ellis for rescuing from obscurity this important chapter in our history.
 

 
 
 
 
I have no information as to the dates of his birth or his death.
 

 
 
Editor's Note:
If you have any more information on this pioneer aviator,
please contact me.
E-mail to Ralph Cooper

 
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