Howard Hughes
A silver speedster from the 1930s evokes the golden age of flight, a pair of world-class speed records and the early triumphs of Howard Hughes' ultimately tragic life
- By Timothy Foote
- Smithsonian magazine, February 1995, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Hughes went on to live an extraordinary and ultimately tragic life, one that made a different sort of headline. He founded a great electronics company and gave millions to medical research. During World War II he designed the Spruce Goose, a huge plywood flying boat that was derided in part because when it was ready, the country no longer needed it. And he died wretched.
After landing in Newark, the H-1 simply sat for nearly a year and was finally flown back to California by someone else. Hughes eventually sold it, then bought it back. But he never flew the H-1 again. He was proud of it, though. He noted several times that its success had encouraged the development of the great radial-engine fighters of World War II-America's P-47 Thunderbolt and Grumman Hellcat, Germany's Focke-Wulf FW 190 and Japan's Mitsubishi Zero. When, in 1975, shortly before his death, he gave the H-1 to the Smithsonian, the plane had been flown for only 40.5 hours, less than half of that by Howard Hughes.
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Comments (2)
Hello,
I know quite a bit about Howard Hughes. He inspired me before I got my instrument rated pilots' license, is still an inspirational character to me. From all of the research I have done on Howard Hughes, nowhere did I find that he died tragically. I know he crashed his XF-11 and almost died from that, but I don't see how he died a tragic life. Can someone help me out with this statement please? "A silver speedster from the 1930s evokes the golden age of flight, a pair of world-class speed records and the early triumphs of Howard Hughes' ultimately tragic life."
Posted by Joshua V. Busico on October 23,2010 | 06:30 PM
In the "Racer" designation, what does the B stand for?
H 1-B Hughes model 1, B =? Does this have something to do with the fact that a number of H-1 wind tunnel models were tested at CALTECH and possibly the second versin, or B, was the one chosen?
Posted by Garry R. Pape on November 18,2009 | 05:01 PM