Cecil Malcolm Peoli was the youngest professional aviator in the world at the time of his death.
Biography
Peoli was born on October 13, 1894 in New York City to Fanny Cassandra and Marino G. Peoli. His father was in the retail bicycle business and active in the cycling community in New York. His grandfather was the American-born Cuban artist and art collector John J. Peoli. Cecil Peoli attended Townsend Harris Hall and was active in sports there, particularly gymnastics and diving. Peoli joined the New York Model Aero Club, designing model aircraft and joining in competitions in the New York area. He established a distance record for model aircraft propelled by rubber bands. His 24-inch "A" frame craft flew a record distance of 1691 feet, 6 inches in competition in 1911. He granted the Ideal Airplane and Supply Company rights to produce his "Cecil Peoli Racer" model kit in February 1912; the kit was a popular model with hobbyists, displaced only in the 1930s by model kits of Lindbergh's "Spirit of St. Louis." Peoli learned to fly in 1912, training with Thomas Scott Baldwin. At seventeen, Peoli became the youngest person to qualify as a pilot; flying a Baldwin-designed biplane, Peoli qualified at the Mineola, Long Island airfield on June 22, 1912. Working with Baldwin in 1912 and 1913, Peoli flew in 200 exhibition engagements in the U.S. and Canada. In April 1914, he became the first pilot to fly over the Andes from Caracas to La Guaira, completing the first air mail service delivery during the flight, delivering five letters. The young aviator was adept at promotion, and Peoli's flights were frequently mentioned in newspapers. The New York Times noted in June 1912 that he "raced" Harriet Quimby, their planes reaching the airfield simultaneously in Long Island. In January 1915, he formed the Peoli Aeroplane Company with a group of investors and bid successfully on a U.S. Navy contract to supply nine hydro-aeroplanes. The company planned to produce an armor-plated plane for New York and St. Louis cross-country trials. Company directors included bankers and real estate developers Joseph P. Day, Hugh L. Cooper, Nicholas F. Brady, and Harold Roberts. Peoli's design, a biplane with a 150 hp Rausenberger motor, 48-foot spread on the upper surface and 32 foot spread on the lower plane, was manufactured by the Washington Aeroplane Company. During its first test flight at the U.S. Army Aviation Field in College Park, Maryland on April 12, 1915, the biplane crashed at the edge of the airfield, killing Peoli. The collapse of the aircraft indicated that the construction was too weak to carry its heavy load. James Lee Simmons of the Washington Aeroplane Company, which built the plane, speculated that Peoli's decision not to take a 93-pound weight as ballast contributed to the crash, as the plane was thought to be "tail heavy."