The Ultimate Sacrifice. An Aviation Blog by Owen Zupp.

Owen Zupp - Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Where does the time go? This year marked the 25th anniversary of the space shuttle Challenger tragedy. Few of us who were around at the time can forget the TV image of the conflagration and spiralling clouds of smoke lingering silently in the sky. The shocked faces looking skyward and the stilted commentary drowned in disbelief.

Yet sacrifice has always walked close beside the pursuit of new frontiers. Over the centuries, countless explorers and seaborne vessels failed to return as they sought the edge of the earth in search of new lands. Similarly, as the new realms of sky and space availed themselves, a new generation of pioneer put their lives on the line.

Otto Lilienthal, the great German aviation pioneer of the late 19th century set new benchmarks in the pursuit of manned flight with his gliders. Credited by the Wright brothers for his research, Lilienthal paid the ultimate price in 1896 when one of his gliders fell to earth. He was not the first and ultimately proved to be far from the last.

The early aviators were faced with huge adversity. Their machines were frail and the understanding of aerodynamics was in its infancy. Even as the technology of their machines developed over the decades, they still stretched their fledgling machines to the absolute limits of their performance and endurance. Shrinking the globe was a mammoth task and aviation seemingly wanted to accelerate the process. Air races, prize money, Government grants and celebrity were just some of the incentives, but the driving force ultimately came from within. Very few individuals would put their life on the line solely for material gain; the challenge was undoubtedly a prime motivator.

Yet time and again they perished trying. And these were not purely first time novices that history never even knew to forget, these were names established in the halls of aviation fame; Charles Kingsford Smith, Wiley Post, Amelia Earhart, Bert Hinkler, Bill Lancaster and Amy Johnson, to name but a handful. In one way or another, they perished in the very style in which they had lived their lives.

Their sacrifices have not been forgotten, nor did their losses answer all of the questions that aerospace was to ask of its people. As man sought to go higher, farther and faster, the boundaries were often pushed to breaking point and the human link was often the first to fold first. Swept wings, jet engines, supersonic flight, pressurised hulls and the frontier of space continued to ask questions of the engineers, physicists and test pilots. Too often, it claimed many lives before an answer was ultimately found.

The great British aviation pioneer and designer, Sir Geoffrey DeHavilland, lost one of his sons while test flying a new generation jet aircraft, the DH108 Swallow. Another son died in a mid-air collision. The home of flight research in the United States, Edwards Air Force Base, has seen more than its share of triumph and tragedy. It was home to the ‘X-planes’ and saw Chuck Yeager break the sound barrier in 1947. Neil Armstrong cut his teeth at Edwards on the likes of the X-15 before fate would ultimately determine that space was his destiny. Yet in the shadow of the advances loiter the losses and its streets bear the names of many of those heroes. Even the base is named after USAF test pilot, Glen Edwards, who perished with his crew testing the YB-49 ‘Flying Wing’.

The sky was not the limit and soon space became the new frontier. As the Mercury astronauts were launched into orbit with increasing frequency, the Soviet Union was doing so with equal success in the ‘space race’. Both sides encountered losses throughout this period of rapid technological advancement, including the horrific fireball of Apollo 1 on the launch pad during testing at Cape Canaveral. And while the brilliant failure of Apollo 13 was a very close call, the loss of the space shuttle Challenger in 1986 reminded us that flight exploration is still a very dangerous business. The loss of Columbia on re-entry in 2003 re-affirmed the fact.

But for all the losses, ultimately the cause has advanced. In fact it has advanced at a pace that only the imagination would have dared to conjure a century ago. Within the span of an average human life, aviation developed from flimsy frames limping a few hundred feet to man kicking up moon dust with his feet. It is an achievement that all humanity can be proud of and has made the world a smaller place. Its applications have been varied, from powerful war machines to vehicles of tremendous humanitarian aid and from craft of leisure to a means of rescue on cold, dark nights.

But as aviation continues forth, it is vital to remember those who have paid the ultimate price along the way, for it is their courage that has allowed this field of human endeavour to grow like no other. Their willingness to strap into confined cockpits and push the envelope has allowed the rest of the world to reap the benefits of air travel and aerospace in a far more relaxed and safer manner. In aviation, the safety of the masses has often been the achieved at a high cost to an individual.

Furthermore, the price of human life should serve to ward off complacency about forging new frontiers in the sky. It is not our natural realm; we are guests in the air above the earth. We should always pay due respect to our host, for the moment we don’t, the skies have the potential to remind us of our true status in the most brutal manner.

So as we consider the loss of ‘Challenger’, we should offer thanks to her crew and to all of those who have paid the ultimate price in pushing those boundaries in the sky. In tragedy we must always seek to find a greater purpose and learn from the past, so as to avoid history repeating itself. However, despite the lessons learnt, no loss will be the last as we move forward; unfortunately it is the price those heroes pay on our behalf. This cold reality has been with us since the beginning. As he lay on his death-bed the day after his fall to earth, the great Otto Lilienthal uttered, "Kleine Opfer müssen gebracht werden".................. "Small sacrifices must be made.”

 

(c) Owen Zupp 2011.

Recent Posts

Tags

formation flying aviation blog bachelor of aviation Challenger flying school Air Force One Cape Canaveral Canberra Spruce Goose Chuck Yeager Piper de Havilland USAF Boeing 787 canyoner DH Mosquito five tips most popular aviation blog hang glider Gallipoli pilot air future Bill Hitchcock Electronic Flight Bag Karlene Pettit biofuel ditching an airplae airshow Blue Angels Red Baron Flight 6231 forced lending pressurisation Northwest Orient open day Flying Fortress kitplanes Cathay Pacific Cargo J230D sailor careers in aviation Ricky Ponting Heathrow Red Bull RAF ICAO Bomber Command DC-3 Tiger Moth Harvard aviation Glass revolution QANTAS QF32 masters of aviation management K.I.A airlines aviation consultant open cockpit National Press Club ATIS low flying Commercial pilot licence Sydney second airport ANZAC airport security Flying Podcast cricket Arthur Morris flight deck Victorian Air Ambulance Bell 429 helicopter army Canberra Airport writing wings night Ayers Rock there and back Owen Zupp, fly at aeroplane Fokker Nancy Bird commercial pilot license poppies Stearman Wright Brothers Tiger Moth crash CA18 Mustang Temora Aviation Museum Strategic Airlines ditching FA-18 Hornet P-51 airbus Cathay Pacific top tips Ansett Boeing 737-800 PFL Airliner design Charles Kingsford Smith Trans-Tasman joy of flight Kenneth Butterworth McGlashan Fate is the Hunter QANTAS half yearly report tail rotor Bradman QANTAS pilot aero club helicopter Bundaberg aviation speaker Dawn Service flight instruction NTSB GFC EFIS pilot licence firts solo coastal flying flight training Australian Aviation magazine Air France 447 tighar war stalling an airplane interview Puffin Boeing Field the Fatal Stall Rotate Duxford New Zealand Turkish Airways 1951 Cessna Caravan QANTAS A380 Avalon Air Show North American Harvard Super Hornet England aviaton author Nancy Bird-Bird Walton aviation careers Pathfinder Coffee Royal Affair X-planes Grant McHerron A1 Skyraider Charles Ulm RTFV 737 classic Wagga Wagga GPS www.owenzupp.com Australian Army Hornet P-40 Kittyhawk Plane Crazy Down Under CRT solar 0/11 Neil Armstrong Ernest Gann Yak 18T 723 squadron flight blog VH-OQA airliner crash owen zupp Special Casualty Access Team found Wallaby Flight Sullenberger flight instructor security Mrigs field tailwheel Impossible Airport RAA BAE Hawk Hinkler Otto Lilienthal Amelia Earhart preflight briefing L19 Crash Vandenberg plane crash first solo speaking Concorde Airbus A330 aviaton blog fling engine failure take-off aircraft 1942 pilot luskintyre US Navy New Zealand: QANTAS Super King Air Hawker Hurricane green technology going solo flying careers ATFV the bombing of Darwin FA18 air force QANTAS pilots FMC HGS One Six Right blog buting an aeroplane aircraft accident Vietnam War pilot academy stick and rudder Mick Wilson MXS Blackhawk Stanwell Park how to fly an airliner The Museum of Flight pilot license aviation writer aviation journalist Montagnard pilot traininf DH82 Fleet Air Arm terrorism Howland Island Phar Lap bombing of Darwin manuscript Costa Concordia Boeing weather radar ditching an airplane aerobatics EADI de Crespigny outback Steve Waugh Foundation flying blog pre-flight briefing raked wing-tip NSW Ambulance Service boeing 737 flight simulator P-51 Mustang thunderstorm, weather radar Wallaby Airlines 38 Squadron RAAF Douglas DC-3 baggy green Temora aviation pioneer QF32 ballooning flying kangaroo Steve Cooke QF94 Downham Market Kirabati best aviation blog flying schoold QANTAS A380: Nancy Bird airline collapse The Red Barn Geoffrey DeHavilland currency value FA-18 DFC EFB aviation degree aviator addresses take off Boeing Stearman airman World War Two Terwilliger Productions aviation jobs contrail most poular aviation blog bowral Hong Kong Trader C-47 jet upset Lawrence Hargrave Dunlirk biplane dreams Jeppesen NASA aviation author Apollo 1 building your own aeroplane DH Comet Queenstown New Zealand Space Shuttle PCDU Pump Up the Angels sacrifice ANZAC Day 2012 navigation training airliner development speaker Avro Lancaster Vietnam Se5a Ponting Foundation Mach number Sydney Airport Amy Johnson airplane blog Jetstar p Owen Zupp QANTAS engineers Bert Hinkler search aviators J170 keynote speaker Beech King Air Steve Visscher F2G Corsair Mittagong Airfield Garmin G1000 Bradman Foundation learn to fly short field Scouts Defence Force Recruiting Kingsford Smith Flying Doctor QANTAS Airbus A380 Singapore 400 memory Southern Cross 16R principles of flight Glenn McGrath Distinguished Flying Cross Battle of Britain speak Jatstar Airbus Kenneth McGlashan Boeing SST Seattle safer flying ditching an aeroplane P.G. Taylor Practical Pilot RMS Titanic Bulldog Pitts severe turbulence sport aerospace Ice Pilots pilot training D-Day single-engined pilot careers dogfight airport under threat ghost aviation image aviation photography G-force stalling an aeroplane September 11th Chris Sperou Bush Pilot QANTAS announcement ditching an aircraft Vung Tau X-15 metal detectors Keith Anderson flying career Gen-X engines McGrath Foundation cumulonimbus biplae Chino motivational 737-300 Boeing 737NG Lindbergh 2011 737NG Pacific Ocean Jabiru Aircraft cost of flying flying air crash investigations Pitts International Cricket Hall of Fame flight school memorial search for Amelia Earhart contra-rotating propeller Ansett Australia Super Jumbo QNH Queenstown in-flight diversion RFC antique Yak 52 stalling Pathfinders skies 737 learning to fly a aviation CO2 emissions storm cells ANZAC Cove 21st Century thunderstorm airline RAAF Titanic sinking solo rescue trans-Pacific CAC Wirraway Red Tails fatal stall flying jobs arospace jabiru airmanship ambulance jet upset recovery Kitplane QANTAS 747-8F Apollo 13 Sir Donald Bradman Milford Sound popular aviation blog low pass flying training Flight for Control Highlander airplane V1 buying an aeroplane Sydney Harbour Bell 429 the pilot plane crash Caboolture EFATO simpler time Steve Waugh Yak Formation buying an airplane warbirds Boeing 747-8F pilot blog Boeing 747-8i Spitfire warbird aviation consulatant US Airways Flight 1549 wings RNP Royal Australian Navy night bombing coaxial Great Depression landing an aeroplane Airbus A320 Nancy Bird Walton administration Facebook WW1 QANTAS Formula One Grand Prix Around Australia flight Rolls Royce Merlin Paramedic log book choosing a flying school forced landing Nancy Bird Walton: 737-400 Tuskegee Airmen air australia Beechcraft Down to Earth aeroplane blog Uluru early flight Hillary Clinton Cessna pilot jobs STOL Boeing 747-400 deCrespigny UAV caribou SCAT Australia Boeing Everett fly at Sleepless in Seattle coaxe Lest We Forget WW2 box-kites airliner hang gliding Lord of the Rings Airbus A380 John Fisher: airplane 2012 Royal Flying Doctor Shuttleworth Collection B-17 Smithy sky Matt Hall Australian War Memorial Boeing 747 aviaton September 11 CAC Boomerang A320 soldier speaking engagements flight Killed in Action airfiald under threat Air Ambulance airplane HUD 9/11 student pilot Cb glass cockpit Garmin Canberra Bomber

Archive

© Owen Zupp. All rights Reserved.                                             Admin . Privacy . Disclaimer                                            Website by Shot to Pieces . Powered by Blackroom