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Important Dates In Aviation History
| 1500 | The Italian artist and inventor Leonardo da Vinci made drawings of flying machines with flapping wings |
| 1783 | Two Frenchmen - Jean F. Pilatre de Rozier and the Marquis d؛Arlandes - made the first free lighter-than-air ascent. They made the ascent in a hot-air balloon |
| 1804 | Sir George Cayley of Great Britain flew the first successful model glider |
| 1843 | William S. Henson, a British inventor, patented plans for a steam-driven airplane that had many of the basic parts of a modern plane |
| 1848 | John Stingfellow of Great Britain built a small model based on Henson؛s plane. It was launched but remained in the air only briefly |
| 1891 | Otto Lilienthal, a German, became the first person to successfully pilot gliders in flight |
| 1896 | Samuel P. Langley of the United States flew a steam-powered model plane |
| 1903 | Orville and Wilbur Wright of the United States made the first engine-powered, heavier-than-air flights, near Kitty Hawk, N.C. Their first flight went 120 feet (37 meters) and lasted only about 12 seconds |
| 1906 | Trajan Vuia, a Romanian inventor, built the first full-sized monoplane, but it could not fly |
| 1908 | Henri Farman of France made the first official circular flight of 1 kilometer. He also flew 16.45 miles (27.0 kilometers) in the first cross-country flight |
| 1908 | Glenn H. Curtiss made the first official public flight of more than 1 kilometer in the United States |
| 1909 | Louis Bleriot of France became the first person to fly across the English Channel |
| 1910 | Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin of Germany organized the first commercial airline. It used airships and carried 35,000 passengers its first three years. |
| 1911 | Calbraith P. Rodgers made the first tran.scontinental flight across the United States. He flew from Sheepshead Bay, N.Y., to Long Beach, Calif., in a series of short flights that took 84 days |
| 1913 | Igor I. Sikorsky, a Russian inventor, built and flew the first four-engine plane |
| 1914 | The first regularly scheduled airline service in the United states began when Tony Jannus piloted a flying boat between St. Petersburg and Tampa, Florida. |
| 1915 | The first flight of an all-metal, cantilever-wing plane, the Junkers J-1, took place in German. |
| 1919 | Two British fliers, John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown, made the first nonstop transatlantic flight. They flew 1,950 miles from St. John؛s Nfld., to Clifden, Ireland. |
| 1919 | Aircraft Transport and Travel, Ltd., flew the first regular international airmail between London and Paris. |
| 1924 | Two U.S. Army planes made the first round-the-world flight. They took nearly six months to complete the 26,345-mile journey. |
| 1924 | The first all-metal, trimotor transport, the Junkers G-23, was test-flown in German. |
| 1926 | Richard E. Byrd and Floyd Bennett of the United States made the first airplane flight over the North Pole. |
| 1926 | Private airlines took over carrying airmail from the U.S. Post Office Department. |
| 1927 | Charles A. Linbergh, a U.S. pilot, made the first solo nonstop transatlantic flight. He flew 3.610 miles from Garden City, N.Y., to Paris in 33.5 hours. |
| 1927 | The Lockheed Vega, a single-engine transport, flew for the first time. It became one of the most popular transport planes of the 1920؛s and early 1930؛s. |
| 1927 | American Railway Express began air-express service. |
| 1928 | Charles Kingsford Smith and his crew made the first flight across the Pacific. They flew from Oakland, Calif., to Brisbane, Australia, with stops at Honolulu, Hawaii, and Suva, Fiji. |
| 1929 | Richard E. Byrd of the United States and his crew made the first flight over the South Pole. |
| 1930 | Trans World Airlines started the first transcontinental airline service. The trip took 36 hours with an overnight stop in Kansas City. |
| 1931 | Two U.S. pilots, Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon, made the first nonstop airplane flight across the Pacific. They flew from Tokyo to Wenatchee, Washington. |
| 1932 | Amelia Earhart of the United States was the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean alone. She flew from Harbour Grace, Nfld., to Londonderry, Ireland, in 15 hours 18 minutes. |
| 1933 | Wiley Post, a U.S. pilot, made the first solo round-the-world flight, covering 23,452 miles in 3 days 22 hours 1 minute. |
| 1936 | Douglas DC-3 transport planes entered airline service in the United States. They became the most widely used airliners in history. |
| 1936 | United Airlines established the first kitchens for serving meals in flight. |
| 1936 | Pan American World Airways inaugurated the first transpacific passenger service. |
| 1938 | The U.S. Congress established the Civil Aeronautics Board to regulate airline fares, routes, and schedules. |
| 1939 | The first successful flight of a jet-engine airplane took place in Germany. |
| 1939 | Pan American World Airways established the first regular transatlantic passenger service from New York City to Southampton, England. |
| 1942 | The Bell Aircraft Company built the first jet airplane in the United States. It was flown by Robert M. Stanley at Muroc Dry Lake, Calif. |
| 1946 | Airlines established flights for around-the-world passenger service. |
| 1947 | Charles Yeager, a U.S. Air Force captain, made the first supersonic flight, in a Bell X-1 rocket plane. |
| 1952 | De Havilland Comets, the world؛s first large commercial jetliners, began service. |
| 1953 | British Overseas Airways began the first regularly scheduled service with jet airliners. |
| 1953 | The first turboprop transport, the Vickers Viscount, began regular airline service. |
| 1953 | The North American F-100 Super Sabre jet fighter made the first level supersonic flight by a jet plane. |
| 1953 | TWA began the first nonstop, transcontinental passenger service from Los Angeles to New York City. |
| 1954 | Scandinavian Airlines began regular transarctic passenger service from Los Angeles to Europe. |
| 1958 | The Boeing 707 began the first U.S. jet transport service between the United States and Europe. |
| 1958 | British Overseas Airways began the first jet airliner service between the United States and Europe. |
| 1958 | National Airlines began the first U.S. jet airliner service. |
| 1959 | American Airlines began the first transcontinental jet airliner service. |
| 1967 | United Airlines put into service the first airliners capable of carrying over 200 passengers. |
| 1968 | Russian pilots test-flew the world؛s first supersonic transport plane, the Tu-144. |
| 1968 | The first direct airline service opened between the United States and the Soviet Union. |
| 1970 | The first jumbo jet, the Boeing 747, entered airline service. |
| 1970 | The first giant Boeing 747 went into operation for Pan American World Airways. It carried 362 passengers. |
| 1976 | Air France and British Airways put the first supersonic airliners into passenger service. |
| 1978 | The U.S. Congress passed the Airline Deregulation Act. |
| 1984 | Brooke Knapp, a U.S. pilot, flew around the world in a record time of 45 hours 32 minutes 53 seconds. |
| 1984 | The Civil Aeronautics Board was dissolved. |
| 1986 | Richard Rutan and Jeana Yeager, two U.S. pilots, made the first nonstop flight around the world without refueling. The flight began and ended at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. |