Taking Off

My focus today is on Lilian Bland (1878 – 1971) Pioneer Aviator


Lilian Bland

A new sculpture in Glengormley Park commemorates the remarkable achievements of Lilian Bland, the first woman in the world to design, build and fly her own aeroplane.

When I heard about the sculpture I was determined to dust off the camera and go see for myself.   One little detail was missing.  I was a little early……

Finishing touches were still taking place.

When did that ever stop me?  I had a chat with the workmen and they allowed me inside the rails provided I kept my feet on the grass.   The circle of ground beneath the sculpture was still a work in progress.  Hot progress and colourful too.

Closer look at the ‘MayFly’ Sculpture

Lilian, who was born in Kent in May 1878, came with her widowed artist father to live in his native Carnmoney in East Antrim at the home of her aunt, Sarah Smythe in 1900.  Carnmoney Hill became her favourite place to wander and dream about taking off into the clouds.

Inspired by the daring exploits of the first airmen such as Louis Bleriot, Lilian designed and built a ‘flying machine’ Mayfly in the workshop and stables of her home. In February 1910, with the assistance of her aunt’s gardener, Joe Blain, Lilian first flew her aeroplane ‘The Mayfly’ as a glider on the slopes of Carnmoney Hill.  Her flying field was also home to a bull and as Lilian later wrote, “If it gets annoyed and charges I shall have every inducement to fly!”

Front view

Lilian Bland’s great niece Imogen Holmes, tells us:

The young Lilian Bland had been inspired by the Frenchman Bleriot flying the Channel in 1909 and so designed and built the Mayfly.

She was so keen to fly that she came over to England to pick up the engine and took it a back on the train with her.   Once home in Ireland, there was no petrol tank so she used an empty whisky bottle and her aunt’s ear trumpet.

When she flew it, it actually flew for 30 yards. It was barely longer than a cricket pitch but only a little short of the distance Orville Wright flew on his first flight in 1903.

Pilots seat

Requiring a larger field for powered flight she arranged for it to be towed to Lord O’Neill’s 800 acre park at Randalstown.   Her first flights from this location were made in August 1910 and reach the dizzy height of upwards of 30 feet.

Side view

She continued to fly and improve her design until the spring of 1911, when her father who didn’t approve of her flying activities, persuaded her to give it up if he bought her a car. She did so, and became Ford’s first agent in the North of Ireland.

Her family disapproved of what they saw as ‘unladylike’ jobs.  For the granddaughter of the Rev Robert Winstringham Bland, perpetual curate at St George’s Parish Church in Belfast, our Lilian was far from conventional despite her genteel background. She smoked, wore trousers, was a ju-jitsu expert and a good shot with a rifle and was even known to swear a little.

In 1911 she married her cousin Charles Loftus Bland and lived for years in Vancouver Island, Canada. They had a teenage daughter who died in an accident, Lilian came back to England and settled in the village of Sennen near Land’s End.   She died there at the grand age of 92.

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The official unveiling and renaming of the Park will take place in the next week or so.  Maybe then I will discover the name of the Sculptor or Designer.

15 thoughts on “Taking Off

  1. nick

    What a remarkable woman. Predictably, we hear little about her and a lot more about all the male inventors, pilots etc. Good for her refusing to do what “ladies” were expected to do and going her own way. I love the ingenuity of the whisky bottle and ear trumpet. Let’s have lots more Lilians, I say!

    Reply
  2. Nancy

    Grannymar,

    I wonder what Lilian Bland would think of the Airbus 380? Can you imagine?

    Where Lilian and Orville flew about 30 yards on their first flights, this plane has a range of 15,200 km. , has 18 toilets and a TV screen at every seat.

    They sure started something. Hurrah for Lilian and Orville!

    From Wikipedia:

    “The A380’s upper deck extends along the entire length of the fuselage, and its width is equivalent to that of a widebody aircraft. This allows for an A380-800’s cabin with 478 square metres (5,145.1 sq ft) of floor space; 49% more floor space than the current next-largest airliner, the Boeing 747-400 with 321 square metres (3,455.2 sq ft), and provides seating for 525 people in a typical three-class configuration or up to 853 people in all-economy class configurations. The A380-800 has a design range of 15,200 km (8,200 nmi; 9,400 mi), sufficient to fly from New York to Hong Kong for example, and a cruising speed of Mach 0.85 (about 900 km/h or 560 mph at cruising altitude.”

    Reply
  3. Grannymar Post author

    Nick – She was a woman before her time!

    Patty – I am sure I only scraped the top of the cream as it were, regarding Lilian Bland.

    Nancy – Without the likes of Lilian Bland, Orville Wright and later Alcock & Brown, I doubt we would have the Aircraft or the flights we so take for granted today.

    Ramana – You are welcome.

    Reply
  4. Baino

    Wow I had no idea! What a woman. As for the 380 . . .I think I’d like to see them in the air a little longer before I venture onto one.

    Reply
  5. Grannymar Post author

    Baino – When I first heard about this sculpture, I only had one sentence of information about Lilian Bland. I am glad I dug a little deeper.

    Reply
  6. Grannymar Post author

    Big John – I think that finding the ‘Lilian’ sculpture was a learning curve for all of us.

    Reply
  7. blackwatertown

    What a great story. I’d never heard of her.
    Love this bit – Once home in Ireland, there was no petrol tank so she used an empty whisky bottle and her aunt’s ear trumpet.
    The sculpture looks ideal for clambering over too.

    Reply
  8. Grannymar Post author

    Blackwatertown – I laughed too, but it also reminded me of Granny Crotty, a little lady I met in my childhood who was the size of tuppence and used an enormous ear trumpet to hear what we said.

    PS Thanks for the Tweet mention!

    Reply
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    1. Grannymar Post author

      Thank you Gordon for visiting my blog. Do Corgi make model air-planes? I thought it was only cars.

      Reply

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