'V' is for VincentI'm forever fascinated by early aviation rarities... the obscure, the forgotten, the what-ifs; the has-beens. Following yesterday's news on the rare S.E.4a, here's a picture story another odd bird - the Burgess-Dunne tailless hydroplane. More than just a rich man's folly, this was the progeny of a lineage of unconventional swept-wing flying machines stemming from John William Dunne's D.1 glider and powered D.4 that hopped in 1908. Dunne's D.5 was "
certified as the first fixed-wing aircraft ever to achieve natural stability in flight, with one of the official witnesses being Orville Wright". Also per wikipedia: "
Many of Dunne's ideas on stability remain valid, and he is known to have influenced later designers such as John K. Northrop (father of the Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit stealth bomber)."
Dunne was in the employ of Britain's Army Balloon Factory (that evolved into the Royal Aircraft Factory) before forming Blair-Atholl Syndicate Ltd, which produced his D.8 in small numbers. The Royal Flying Corps acquired one D.8 on strength at Farnborough in the spring of 1914. D.8 production was licensed to Nieuport in France and Burgess in the United States. Various Burgess-Dunne models were used by the US Signal Corps and the US Navy. One was the Canadian Aviation Corps' first and only warplane when the Great War erupted.
(respectively from the Wilmington News Journal and The Sun, 14/26 September 1915):






The subject flying-V was newly acquired by Vincent Astor of New York, who was twenty-years old when his father, the richest man aboard the Titanic, drowned in April 1912. Being a member of the New York Yacht Club, the young Astor's 'HydroAeroplane' fittingly complemented the private steamship
Noma, which he had recently inherited. As noted, one of Astor's first flights was from his custom-built floating hangar in Marblehead, Massachusetts to Ferncliff - his family homestead in Rhinebeck, NY (mere miles from Cole Palen's future aerodrome). Wouldn't it be fun to see a replica in flight there today? More on this particular machine:
https://www.massairspace.org/virtualexhibit/vex2/bd-7%20flight%201915.pdf.
Fun Fact: Astor loaned his yacht
Noma to the US Navy for anti-submarine duty in 1917. It subsequently changed hands and names several times and wound up being requisitioned by Italy's
Regia Marina during World War II. It was bombed and sunk off Sicily by the Royal Air Force in 1941, refloated by Italy, then sunk again for good by the RAF in 1943.
And here's a post from forum member phs Paddy regarding a card model of this machine:
https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=216.msg2634;topicseen#msg2634