The Collection
Louis Bleriot Landing in Dover
July 25th 1999 marked the ninetieth anniversary of the first
flight across the Channel in a heavier than air flying machine.
It was completed by Louis Bleriot in only thirty-seven minutes
flying an aeroplane of his own design - a Bleriot Type XI
monoplane. The tiny aircraft, with a wing span of twenty-five and a
half feet, was powered by a three cylinder engine which developed
only twenty-five horsepower.
Monsieur Bleriot left Baraques at 4.35 in the morning after a
test flight around Calais. The aircraft was not fitted with a
compass and Monsieur Bleriot steered his course by watching the
shipping in the Channel. He first crossed the coast at St.
Margaret's Bay because he had been put off course by the wind, but
made his way up the coast to Dover. At Dover his friend Monsieur
Fontaine guided him to the landing ground on Northfall Meadow by
waving a large French flag.
The customs officer who arrived to record the landing recorded
the aircraft as a yacht and its pilot as its Master as he had no
category to cover the event.
For his exploit Monsieur Bleriot won a £1,000 prize offered by
the Daily Mail.
The monoplane was damaged in the landing but was later repaired
and is now preserved in Paris at the Musee de l'Air. The spot where
the aircraft landed is marked by a monument paid for by Alexander
Duckham who witnessed the landing.
