CLYDE CESSNA - PIONEER AVIATOR
Aviation owes much to a farm boy whose
name became synonymous with monoplanes and played a major role in
making Wichita the "Air Capital of the World."
Clyde Vernon Cessna had been a successful
Overland automobile dealer in Enid , Oklahoma for several years until
1911 when he was struck with flying fever. Fascinated by the frail
but efficient Bleriot XI monoplane that traversed the English Channel
in 1909, Cessna eventually left Oklahoma for New York City , where
he worked briefly for the Queen Aeroplane Company and learned about
airplanes and how they were constructed.
Cessna dubbed his first airplane the "Silverwing." It
was an American-built copy of the Bleriot XI, and would eventually
teach Cessna the art of aviating. Powered by a two-stroke, four-cylinder
Elbridge "Aero Special" engine that developed 40 hp. at 1,050
RPM, the Elbridge was a marine powerplant that had been converted
for aviation use. In Throughout 1911 Cessna made many flights in the
airplane on the Great Salt Plains near Jet, Oklahoma in an effort to
teach himself how to fly. He and Silverwing suffered numerous accidents,
but in December 1911 Clyde made a highly successful, five-mile flight
near Enid that included turns and ended with a safe landing at the
departure point.
Flushed with success, Cessna severed his ties with the automobile business
and devoted his time, energy, and money to exhibition flying. It was
a lucrative endeavor for any pilot who could keep his airplane aloft
for only a few minutes at holiday events and county fairs. During 1912-1915
he built several monoplanes, all of them powered by six-cylinder Anzani
radial engines that developed 40-60 hp. Although successful, the Cessna
Exhibition Company only whetted Clyde 's appetite to become more involved
in the fledgling aviation business. Flying was fun and profitable, but
what he really wanted to do was manufacture and sell airplanes of his
own design to the public.
In 1916 he set up shop in a vacant building
in Wichita , Kansas and built a new airplane for the 1917 exhibition
season. Cessna also established a flight school at the "factory" and enrolled five young men
as students. When the United States declared war on the Central Powers
in April 1917, Cessna's exhibition flying ground to halt. Instead, he
returned to farming at his home near Rago , Kansas and harvested wheat
to help feed the "doughboys" fighting in France .

Clyde 's interest in aeronautics never
faded during the war, and he dreamed of returning to Wichita and resuming
the manufacture of airplanes. Cessna continued flying, however, and
bought a new Laird "Swallow" biplane
that he flew during the early 1920s. He used the OX-5-powered Swallow
to give his favorite nephew, Dwane Wallace, an introduction to the world
of aviation.
Late in 1924, Cessna was visited by Lloyd
Stearman and Walter Beech, who had been key employees of the Swallow
Company under leadership of the cantankerous Jacob M. "Jake" Moellendick.
The two young men, in concert with a few other people, had split from
Swallow and planned to form a new business to be known as the Travel
Air Manufacturing Company. Stearman urged Cessna to join them, chiefly
because Lloyd knew he and Beech needed Cessna's expertise in aviation
as well as his money and equipment. It was a hard sell, but Cessna
agreed.
In return for his participation and investment,
Clyde was named president. The infant company began life in a cramped,
30x30-ft. space in the rear of a planing mill in downtown Wichita .
Travel Air's first product was an attractive, two-bay biplane designed
by Stearman and was dubbed the "Model
A." It made its first flight in March 1925. At a price of more than
$3,000, the OX-5-powered Model A was expensive compared with the plethora
of war-surplus Curtiss JN-4 and Standard J-1 biplanes that still were
available, but it outperformed them both and gradually sales increased
to 19 airplanes the first year.
The company introduced the improved Model B biplane in 1926 that featured
the new, 200-hp. Wright J4 air-cooled radial engine. That year Cessna
convinced Walter Beech that the company should offer a monoplane with
an enclosed cabin for use by small airlines. Beech agreed, and the Travel
Air Type 5000 was based largely on a monoplane designed and custom-built
by Cessna earlier in 1926. A slightly larger and more powerful version
of the prototype airplane was ordered by National Air Transport, and
8 eventually were delivered to the airline.
Despite the success of the Type 5000, Cessna
was restless. In January 1927 he sold his stock and resigned from Travel
Air to build a full cantilever monoplane he named the "Phantom." It
was a graceful, three-place machine powered by a 90-hp. Anzani radial
engine and flew well. In 1927 Cessna and Victor Roos joined forces
to found the Cessna Aircraft Company on the west side of Wichita .
With help from his talented son Eldon and other company engineers,
in 1927-1929 Clyde marketed a succession of 4- and 6-place monoplanes
designated Model AA, Model BW, and the popular Model AW series.
With the advent of Wall Street's collapse in the autumn of 1929, Cessna
and other manufacturers soon found themselves without customers for their
products. To spur sales, Cessna slashed prices but to no avail. Faced
with the prospect of bankruptcy, in 1931 the board of directors of the
Cessna Aircraft Co. voted to oust Cessna and close the factory doors.
It seemed as though Clyde 's involvement in aviation was over, but he
never gave up.
Undaunted, Cessna and Eldon rented vacant facilities in the abandoned
Travel Air complex on East Central Ave. and created the C.V. Cessna Aircraft
Co. that specialized in building diminutive, custom racing airplanes.
The most successful of these was the CR-3 owned and flown by the great
air-racing pilot Johnny Livingston. In the wake of losing his company
to the stockholders in 1931, Cessna was dealt another blow in 1933 when
his close friend Roy Liggett died in the crash of the CR-2 racer built
by Clyde and Eldon. Cessna's grief ran deep. He withdrew from aviation
and retreated to his farm near Rago.
In 1934 his nephew Dwane Wallace, armed
with a degree in aeronautical engineering and with help from his brother
Dwight Wallace, wrested control of the defunct Cessna Aircraft Company
from the stockholders and introduced the classic Cessna C-34 monoplane.
Clyde agreed to participate in the new venture only in a ceremonial
capacity, and was not involved directly in the day-to-day operations
of the company. The C-34 was a success and was named the world's most
efficient airplane. Dwane Wallace went on to guide the company through
the turbulent 1930s, oversaw development of the twin-engine T-50 that
became the famed Cessna "Bobcat" of
World War Two fame, and introduced the Model 190/195, Model 120/140 into
the post-war market. Later, these airplanes were followed by the ubiquitous
Model 150 and 172 Skyhawk as well as the sleek Model 310 made famous
by the Sky King television series.
After more than 40 years in the aviation business and incalculable contributions
to aeronautics, Clyde Cessna died in November 1954 age 74. He never held
a pilot's license and had received only a rudimentary education, but
his genius with airplanes coupled with an unshakable determination to
succeed has made his name and legacy an icon in the history of flying.
By Edward H. Phillips, Cessna and Travel Air historian
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