Monocoupe | ||||||||||
110
Special # |
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Photo: Robert Deering 10/23/2006 Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Dulles International Airport (IAD) Chantilly, Virginia |
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Air show
pilot and aerobatic champion W. W. "Woody" Edmondson
thrilled audiences with his Monocoupe 110 Special throughout
the 1940s. Edmondson, who named the airplane Little Butch
for its bulldog-like appearance, placed second to "Bevo"
Howard and his Bücker Jungmeister in the 1946 and '47
American Aerobatic Championships, but he won the first
International Aerobatic Championship in 1948. The Monocoupe 110 Special was a clipped-wing version of the 110, part of a line that began with Don Luscombe's Mono 22 and continued with the 70, 90, and 110 models. The sport coupes of the 1930s, these fast and maneuverable aircraft were ideal for racers Phoebe Omlie and Johnny Livingston. Ken Hyde of Warrenton, Virginia, restored Little Butch prior to its donation to the Smithsonian.
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