James Floyd Smith
James Floyd Smith (17 October 1884 – 18 April 1956) was an inventor, aviation pioneer, and parachute manufacturer. With borrowed money, he built, then taught himself to fly his own airplane.[2] He worked as a flight instructor and test pilot for Glenn L. Martin at Bennett's bean field, which became LAX. From San Diego in 1916, Smith won the Aero Club of America's Medal of Merit by setting three altitude records, flying a Martin S seaplane reaching that aircraft's ceiling of 12,333 feet. During World War I, he formed the Floyd Smith Aerial Equipment Company in San Diego, California. In May 1920, he won a patent for the first back pack, free fall type, ripcord operated parachute. Smith's original ripcord parachute is on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Dayton, Ohio.[3][1]
James Floyd Smith | |
---|---|
Smith circa 1915 in San Diego | |
Born | |
Died | April 18, 1956 71) | (aged
Resting place | Portal of Folded Wings |
Education | Public schools in Union, Oregon and San Diego, California[1] |
Occupation | Engineer Instructor Pilot Test Pilot Parachute Manufacturer |
Employer | Glenn Martin Smith Parachute Company |
Known for | Aviation pioneer Parachute |
Spouse(s) | Hilder F. Youngberg(1890-1977) |
Children | Sylvester Smith(1908-1919) Prevost Vedrines Smith(1913–1991) |
Parent(s) | John Floyd Smith(1843-1909) Katie Josephine Orcutt(1855-1943) |
Awards | Medal of Merit from the Aero Club of America |
Biography
Smith was born in Geneseo, Illinois on 17 October 1884, his family then moved to Union, Oregon. Floyd was a cowboy, machinist, orange grower, sugar factory worker, and flying circus trapeze artist with the Flying Sylvesters.[3] On 11 May 1907 he married his Flying Sylvesters daredevil co-star Hilder Florentina Youngberg of Galesburg, Illinois. They had two sons Sylvester Smith (1908-1919) and Prevost Vedrines Smith (1913–1991) aka Prevost Floyd Smith. In 1919 at age 11, Sylvester was tragically killed by a car in Chicago.[4] With the help of Hilder and Frank Shaw, Floyd built his own airplane and soloed it 1 Jun 1912.[5] After the Sylvesters, in 1915, Floyd Smith worked for Glenn L. Martin Company as a mechanic and test pilot. He then started the Floyd Smith Aerial Equipment Company as its founder. Recruited for the US Army parachute design team at McCook Field, Smith entered his own design into the Army's best parachute competition enlisting a dress making company, the Mitchell Brothers of Chicago, to manufacture test chutes.[Sky 1] In the 1920s working with Switlik Parachute Company of Trenton, New Jersey, he designed a new rip cord and parachute pack with improved function and cost(U.S. Patent No. 1,755,414 “Floyd Smith Safety Pack.”) Smith also invented the “Floyd Smith Safety Seat” for Switlik (U.S. Patent No. 1,779,338). His Safety Seat had an attached parachute and could be dropped through the bottom of an airplane’s fuselage in an emergency.[4] In 1930, the family was living in Morrisville, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and Floyd worked as an engineer.[6]
In 1938, Smith helped start and run the Pioneer Parachute Company of Manchester, Connecticut, working as vice president and chief engineer. Due to WWII shortages, nylon replaced silk for the main chute. By 1942, Pioneer was the largest producer of nylon parachutes in the world. At the peak, 3,000 employees made 300 parachutes each day, making Pioneer one of the largest suppliers for American servicemen who jumped behind enemy lines on D-Day. After working several years together at Pioneer, in 1947, Floyd and son Prevost Smith founded the Smith Parachute Company, at Gillespie Field in San Diego. After Floyd's passing in 1956, and the company renamed Prevost F. Smith Parachute Company continued to innovate parachute design and manufacturing.[7] Prevost Smith made chutes for astronauts, military weapons drops, the US Navy, the USAF, and large defense contractors.[4]
Floyd died on April 18, 1956 in San Diego, California of cancer.[8] He is buried in the Portal of Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation.[9][10][11]
In 2009, Floyd Smith was awarded the Parachute Industry Association's Don Beck Memorial Achievement Award.[1]
Patent
In April 1914, after his wife's near fatal static line jump, Smith worked to improve parachute design.[4] A patent, assigned to the Floyd Smith Aerial Equipment Company of San Diego, California, was filed on July 27, 1918 and issued May 18, 1920 for Smith's parachute. In September 1918, General Billy Mitchell directed that a team evaluate available parachutes and identify the best chute. Mitchell picked Glenn Martin test pilot and former flying circus daredevil Floyd Smith. Smith added motor mechanic Guy Ball to his two man team.[12] After the WWI Armistice, Smith's team came under command of Major E.L. Hoffman who added several other civilians including: Floyd Smith, Guy Ball, show-jumper Harry Eibe, Army parachutist Ralph Bottreil, engineers James Russell and Jimmy Higgins. The newly reorganized team tested 17 parachute designs including: static line designs of Broadwick, Stevens, Ors, Kiefer Kline, Otto Heinecke, Leslie Irvin, Omaha Tent Company, and Floyd Smith.[12] The first tests, using dummies, favored Floyd Smith's parachute design. This winning design was further developed and merged key features into the "Type A" parachute: a soft pack worn on the back; a rip cord to deploy the parachute; and a spring-assisted pilot chute to aid in main parachute deployment.[13] Conservative Major Hoffman and others believed the free-fall was dangerous and that a jumper might blackout before pulling the ripcord. Aerial circus jumpers Floyd Smith and Leslie Irvin convinced Hoffman to test the Type A with Irvin volunteering to jump and Smith piloting the test.[12]
On 28 April 1919 using the "Type A" 28-foot backpack parachute, volunteer Leslie Irvin, flying in a Smith piloted de Havilland DH9 biplane at 100 mph and 1500 feet above the ground, jumped (with a backup chute strapped to his chest) and manually pulled the ripcord fully deploying his chute at 1000 feet.[14] Irvin became the first American to jump from an airplane and manually open a parachute in midair. Floyd Smith filed the Type A patent No. 1,462,456 on the same day. The Parachute Board determined the backpack chute was crowding the cockpit, a redesign moved the parachute down the pilots back becoming the "seat style" chute.[15] The McCook Field team tested the Type A parachute with over 1000 jumps. These successful tests resulted in the Army requiring parachute use on all Air Service flights.[16][4]
An early brochure[17] of the Irving Air Chute Company credits William O'Connor 24 August 1920 at McCook Field as the first person to be saved by an Irving parachute, yet this was unrecognized. On 20 October 1922, Lieutenant Harold R. Harris, chief of the McCook Field Flying Station, jumped from a disabled Loening PW-2A high wing monoplane fighter. Harris' lifesaving chute was mounted on the wall of McCook's parachute lab where the Dayton Herald's aviation editor Maurice Hutton and photographer Verne Timmerman, predicting more jumps in future, suggested that a club should be formed. Two years later, Irvin's company instituted the Caterpillar Club, awarding a gold pin to pilots who successfully bailed out of disabled aircraft using an Irving parachute.[18][19] The Switlik Parachute Company of Trenton, New Jersey issued both gold and silver caterpillar pins.[18]
After Major Hoffman wrote the US Army specifications for the Type A parachute, the Army Air Service placed an order for 300 parachutes from the lowest bidder; Irvin's Irving Air Chute Company. After Irvin lost a patient dispute to Floyd Smith with zero compensation due to US Army parachute orders, the US Government compensated Smith with $3500 to transfer his patient to Irvin's company.[4] Floyd's original 1919 ripcord parachute is on display at the Air Force Museum at Dayton, Ohio.[16] Smith was issued a total of 33 patients.[14]
Floyd Smith Aerial Life Pack | Pat. No. 1,340,423 | Filed: 27 July 1918 | Issued: 18 May 1920 | Title: Parachute | Floyd Smith Aerial Equipment Co., San Diego, California |
“Type A” | Pat. No. 1,462,456 | Filed: 28 April 1919 | Issued: 17 July 1923 | Title: Parachute Pack and Harness | Floyd Smith Aerial Equipment Co, later US Govt paid transfer to Irving Air Chute Company |
See also
References
- "Floyd Smith".
- "James Floyd Smith".
- "10 Things You Need to Know About Floyd Smith" (PDF).
- Ladino, Marie. "Pulling the Rip Cord". USPTO.gov. Retrieved May 7, 2020.
- "James Floyd Smith". Earlyaviators.com. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
- 1930 US Census; Morrisville, Bucks County, Pennsylvania
- "James Floyd Smith". Early Aviators. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
... he and Floyd started the Smith Parachute Company in San Diego County, which became the Prevost Smith Parachute Co. after Floyd's death in 1956.
- "Of Fleeting Fame; Unusual achievements of some unusual people who died in 1956". New York Times. December 30, 1956. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
He invented the modern ripcord parachute ...
- "Died". Time magazine. April 30, 1956. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
James Floyd Smith, 71, onetime dauntless barnstorming flyer and test pilot, who invented the modern ripcord parachute, founder of the Pioneer Parachute Company; of cancer; in San Diego.
- "James Floyd Smith". Catholic News Service in Star-News. December 18, 1956.
Pasadena, California. Memorial services for James Floyd Smith, pioneer aviator and one of the first men to ever parachute from a plane, were held at the Portal of the ...
- "James Floyd Smith, 71". Washington Post. December 18, 1956.
Aeronautic engineer and pioneer flier who invented the first successful free type of manually operated parachute now used by the Air Force, established three altitude records for seaplanes and was awarded the Aero Club of America Medal or Merit; in San Diego, California. ...
- Hearn, Peter. The Sky People A History of Parachuting (First ed.). UK: Airlife. pp. 72–76. ISBN 1-85310-114-1.
- "Parachutes Construction and Types 1942 US Army Training Film". Vimeo.com. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
- Stamp, Jimmy (March 7, 2013). "An Early History of the Parachute". Smithsonian.
- Keisel, Kenneth M. (March 14, 2016). Images of Aviation Wright Field (First ed.). Arcadia Publishing. p. 66. ISBN 978-1-4671-1629-9.
- Raider, Ran. "Dayton - Miami Valley Inventors and Inventions". Wright State University. Archived from the original on February 27, 2004.
- "Milestones".
- Irvin GQ History - Accessed 28 Jan 2011 Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
Sources
- Los Angeles Tribune; March 20, 1915; "Bird-Baby" Flies 21 Miles Gazes Down 4500 Ft. on City.
Bibliography
- Hearn, Peter (1990). The Sky People A History of Parachuting (First ed.). UK: Airlife. p. 73. ISBN 1-85310-114-1.