JoeF wrote:
Octave ChanuteBirth family name: Chanut
This topic thread invites all things in the intersection of Octave Chanute and hang gliding, as well as focus on Octave Chanute himself. He deeply influenced early hang gliding and remains in legacy with influence to the moment.
http://ia700502.us.archive.org/21/items ... ckrich.pdf Flying Machines
Construction & Operationis a book published in 1910 where Octave Chanute wrote the introductory chapter.
Not that it means anything, but I have spent time, both, on the historic (now replaced) Hannibal railroad bridge and loading livestock in the Chanute designed KC stockyards, for Union Pacific railroad in Kansas City.
I more enjoyed the time on the bridge watching muddy water flow than I did in the stockyards.
Hogs were loaded in stock cars, late in the afternoon, and then positioned on the head end of a fast freight train for an overnight run to North Platte, Nebraska.
Meat packing plants used to be directly across the Kaw River, in Kansas City, Kansas, connected by another bridge designed by Chanute. All history now, and all gone.