Dictionary Definition
barnstormer
Noun
2 a pilot who travels around the country giving
exhibits of stunt flying and parachuting [syn: stunt flier,
stunt
pilot]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
nofootnotes article
- ''The term "flying circus" redirects here. For other meanings see Flying Circus (disambiguation), for other uses of "Barnstorm" see Barnstorm (disambiguation).
Barnstorming was a popular form of entertainment
in the 1920s in which stunt pilots would
perform tricks with airplanes, often in groups as a flying circus.
These aerialists — or "barnstormers" as they became known —
performed almost any trick or feat with an airplane
that people could imagine. Barnstorming was also the first major
form of civil
aviation in the history of flight. For many pilots and
stuntpeople, barnstorming provided an exciting and invigorating way
to make a living as well as a challenging outlet for their
creativity and showmanship.
History
Although some aviators, like the Wright
brothers and Glenn
Curtiss, had early flying exhibition teams, barnstorming did
not become a formal phenomenon until the 1920s. Two main
factors helped barnstorming grow in North America after the war —
the number of former World War I
aviators who wanted to
make a living flying, and a surplus of Curtiss JN-4
"Jenny" biplanes. During
the war, the United
States had manufactured a multitude of Jennys to train its
military aviators; almost every U.S. airman had learned to fly
using a Jenny. Consequently, when the federal government priced its
surplus Jennys for as little as $200 during the postwar period
(they originally cost approximately $5,000 each), many of the
servicemen, who were already quite familiar and comfortable with
the JN-4's, purchased their own planes. These two factors, coupled
with the fact that there were no federal regulations governing
aviation at the time, allowed barnstorming to flourish during the
postwar era.
Barnstorming thrived in North
America during the first half of the 1920s, but by
1927 when
competition demanded more and more dangerous acts, a rash of highly
publicized accidents occurred, and new safety regulations forced
the demise of the popular entertainment. The federal government —
spurred by a perceived need to protect the public, and responding
to local pilots who were upset that barnstormers were stealing
their customers — enacted several laws that began to regulate the
fledgling civil aviation business. Such laws made it nearly impossible for
barnstormers to keep their already fragile Jennys up to
specifications (let alone in the air), and outlawed several forms
of aerial stunts, at least at a low enough altitude where crowds
could easily view them. When these factors were coupled with the
fact that the military stopped selling Jennys in the late 1920s,
barnstormers found it too difficult to continue to make a living
stunting and they abandoned their art. Although some modern pilots
flying vintage aircraft
from the '20s continue the barnstorming tradition and offer open
cockpit
biplane rides to the public from a handful of airports around the
country, nothing can compare to the magnitude of that period in the
1920s, when itinerant aerial shows sprung up throughout North
America day after day and made audiences gasp with
excitement.
Patterns of Barnstorming
Most barnstorming shows followed a typical
pattern. On any given day, a pilot, or team of pilots, would fly
over a small rural town and attract the attention of the local
inhabitants. The pilot or team of aviators would then land at a
local farm (hence the name "barnstorming") and negotiate with the
farmer for the use of one of his fields as a temporary runway from
which to stage an air show and offer airplane rides to customers.
After obtaining a base of operation, the pilot or group of aviators
would fly back over the town, or "buzz" the village, and drop
handbills offering airplane rides for a small fee, usually from one
to five dollars. The advertisements would also
tout the daring feats of aerial daredevilry that would be offered.
Crowds would then follow the airplane, or pack of planes, to the
field and purchase tickets for joy rides. The locals, most of whom
had never seen an airplane up close, were thrilled with the
experience. For many rural towns, the appearance of a barnstormer
or an aerial troop on the horizon was akin to declaring a national
holiday; almost everything in the town would shut down at the
spur of the moment so that people could purchase plane rides and
watch the show.
Barnstormers performed a wide range of stunts. Although many of them
handled all their own tricks, others became specialists, either
stunt pilots or aerialists. Stunt pilots
performed daring spins and dives with their planes, including the
well-known loop-the-loop and barrel roll maneuvers. Aerialists, on
the other hand, performed such feats as wing walking, soaring
through the air with winged costumes, stunt parachuting, and midair
plane transfers. Essentially barnstormers, particularly the
aerialists, performed just about any feat people could dream up;
there seemed to be no limit to what they could accomplish. While
some played tennis,
practiced target
shooting, or even danced on the wings of planes, others such as
Eddie
Angel did unique stunts. Angel's specialty was the "Dive of
Death," a nighttime jump from a plane that barnstorming historian
Don Dwiggins describes as "a free-fall from 5,000 feet, while
holding a pair of big flashlights."
One particular maneuver was termed the flat hat, or
undertaking it called flat-hatting-
to fly an airplane close to the ground and at a high or dangerous
speed- allegedly coined due to a barnstormer flying so close to
onlookers, they crushed a spectator's hat.
Flying Circuses
Although many barnstormers worked on their own, or in very small teams, there were several that put together large "flying circuses" with several planes and stunt people. These types of acts had their own promoters who would book the show into a town ahead of time. They were the largest and most organized of all of the barnstorming acts.Some of the best-known flying circuses included
those run by Ivan Gates (an old-time promoter of early exhibition
fliers), Jimmy Angel
(Eddie Angel's brother), Jimmy and Jessie Woods (a husband and wife
team from Kansas), and Douglas Davis (the future winner of the 1934
Bendix Race). There was even an all African American group called
"The Five Blackbirds" headed by Hubert
Julian. The Ivan Gates Flying Circus was perhaps the most
traveled of all of the major barnstorming acts. It toured almost
every state in the union and traveled quite extensively
internationally. Gates and his colleagues were famous not only for
their stunts but also for having started the one-dollar-joy ride.
This ride was so popular that in a single day, Bill Brooks, one of
Gates' pilots, took 980 passengers up for rides during a show in
Steubenville,
Ohio.
Some of the greatest stunt fliers of the day
worked for Gates. As historian Don Dwiggins has noted, many
scholars believe that "the Gates Flying Circus turned out more
famed pilots than the Army and Navy put together" during the
barnstorming era. One of Gates' best-known fliers was Clyde
"Upside-Down" Pangborn. "Pang" was part owner of the Gates circus
and its chief pilot and operating manager. As his nickname
suggests, he specialized in flying upside down. Another key stunt
he performed was to change planes in midair; he held the world
record for the feat. In 1924, he also
performed a newsworthy deed when he rescued Rosalie Gordon, a
stuntwoman, in midair when her parachute got tangled in his plane's
landing gear. During its heyday from 1922 to 1928, the Gates Flying
Circus took an estimated one million passengers up for joy rides
without inflicting any serious injuries on them.
Barnstorming appealed to many pilots as a way to
make a living. Several famous aviators worked as stunt pilots or
aerialists at one time or another. Charles
Lindbergh, for example, got his start barnstorming. Besides
learning to fly on the barnstorming circuit, Lindbergh also started
to wing walk, parachute, and work on engines. Some other well-known
daredevils included Roscoe
Turner (a famous speed racer), Bessie
Coleman (the first licensed African American female pilot),
Pancho
Barnes, (a well-known speed queen of the "Golden Era of
Airplane Racing"), Wiley Post,
(the holder of two trans-global speed records), and several
Hollywood
stuntmen and stunt pilots, among many others.
Looking back
Although many people view barnstorming as a romantic period in aviation, others debate that interpretation. On one hand, some barnstormers did quite well both financially and socially. Several towns across the nation paid them quite handsomely for their shows and held parties and dances in their honor. Some pilots and aerialists also obtained free room and board when they traveled. Nevertheless, the nomadic existence of barnstorming could also cause serious problems. Sometimes it was difficult for pilots to find fuel or the right parts for their planes. Other times, they could go several days without attracting a large enough crowd to make a profit. And if those factors were not problematic enough, as Jessie Woods of the Flying Aces Air Circus declared: "Don't let them kid you — it wasn't romantic. I slept on the bottom wing of an airplane. I learned how to sleep there without falling off. I've gone through as much as three days without sleep. There's nothing romantic about that."In popular culture
- In 1982 Activision produced a Barnstorming game cartridge for the Atari 2600. http://www.atariage.com/manual_html_page.html?SoftwareID=846
- Also in 1982, Philip Jose Farmer's book A Barnstormer in Oz featured Hank Stover, a barnstorming pilot. His "Jenny" biplane becomes a featured character when it's brought to life.
- Hikaru Ichijyo a.k.a. Rick Hunter of Macross/Robotech came from a family of barnstorming aviators, who held an amateur flying circus.
- Scottish singer-songwriter Al Stewart paid homage to barnstorming with the song "The Immelman Turn" on his 2005 album A Beach Full of Shells. http://alstewart.com/lyrics/immelmanturn.htm
- In RollerCoaster Tycoon 2, a roller coaster type titled "Barnstorming Roller Coaster" is available when the Time Twister expansion pack is installed. The coaster cars of this coaster type are replica biplanes.
- The American rock band State Radio released a song entitled "Barnstorming" on their 2007 LP Year of the Crow.
- The Ambient Americana instrumentalist Sumner McKane released a song entitled "Hey Grandpa, Who Were the Barnstormers?" on his 2006 LP "Night Blooming Cereus."
- The University of Dayton mascot, Rudy Flyer, is described as a barnstorming pilot.
Filmography
- Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines (1965) – comedy
- The Great Waldo Pepper (1975)
- Nothing by Chance (1975) – a documentary produced and narrated by Hugh Downs about the biplanes that barnstormed across America during the 1920s
Further reading
- Bach, Richard. Nothing By Chance. Dell. 1990.
- Bach, Richard. Biplane. Dell 1990.
- Caidin, Martin. Barnstorming. New York: Bantam Books, 1991.
- Cleveland, Carl M. "Upside-Down" Pangborn: King of the Barnstormers. Glendale, Cal.: Aviation Book Company, 1978.
- Cooper, Ann L. On the Wing: Jessie Woods and the Flying Aces Air Circus. Mt. Freedom, N.J.: Black Hawk Publishing Co., 1993.
- Corley-Smith, Peter. Barnstorming to Bush Flying: British Columbia's Aviation Pioneers, 1910-1930. Victoria, British Columbia, Canada: SONO NIS Press, 1989.
- Corn, Joseph J. The Winged Gospel: America's Romance with Aviation, 1900-1950. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983.
- Dwiggins, Don. The Air Devils: the Story of Balloonists, Barnstormers, and Stunt Pilots. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1966.
- "Barnstormers," in Alan C. Jenkins, Airborne. Glasgow: Blackie, 1975.
- The Barnstormers: Flying Daredevils of the Roaring Twenties. New York: Grosset and Dunlap, 1968.
- Glines, Carroll V. Roscoe Turner: Aviation's Master Showman. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1995.
- O'Neil, Paul. Barnstormers and Speed Kings. Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books, 1981.
- Rhode, Bill. Bailing Wire, Chewing Gum and Guts: the Story of the Gates Flying Circus. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 1970.
- Ronnie, Art. Locklear: the Man Who Walked on Wings. South Brunswick, UK: A.S. Barnes and Company, 1973.
- Tessendorf, K.C. Barnstormers and Daredevils. New York: Atheneum, 1988.
- Barnstorming and Air Mail Prairie Public.
- Barnstorming and Early Pilots in the Mid-Columbia Area
- Barnstorming to Bush Flying - Stuart Graham Papers.
- Charles H. Hubbell, 1899-1971 - Barnstormer Art.
- Earle, Joe. Barnstorming Pilots Always Drew a Crowd - Wings Over Kansas.
- Fun Facts about Barnstormers
- Information About and How to Fly the Curtiss Jenny Barnstormer - Fiddler's Green.
- International Society of Aviation Barnstorming Historians - Cross Roads Access Corinth History.
- Joe W. Kittinger, Jr. - Cross Roads Access Corinth History.
- Daredevil Lindbergh and his Barnstorming Days (Alternative link) - McCullough, David.
- Summer - A modern day barnstomer writes a sweet tale of barnstoming in the '20s
- Walt Pierce - American Barnstormer
- This article has been based almost entirely on the US Centennial Of Flight Commission's Essay on Barnstormers.
- The Flying Circus Airshow - A barnstorming airshow that has been performing since the 1970's, in the style of the 1930's style traveling show.
barnstormer in Lithuanian: Skrajojantis
cirkas