Two miles above Daytona Beach two years ago, a slim, sandy-haired professional parachutist from Lansing, Mich, named Clement Joseph (“Clem”) Sohn stepped from a plane, spread homemade “bat wings” of ...
When Clem Sohn met his end at a Paris air show in 1937, flailing desperately as he plunged to earth with a pair of defective parachutes, his death was considered tragic but hardly shocking. The winged ...
Year ago U. S. newspicture editors were astonished to receive from Germany what purported to be the photograph of a man flying under his own power by blowing into a box which supposedly actuated ...
It wasn’t until three decades after the airplane first took flight that a Michigan man named Clem Sohn thought to use the invention to fly unaided, in a home-sewn wingsuit. That event did not exactly ...
On February 27, 1935, a 24-year-old daredevil named Clem Sohn stood in a plane 12,000 feet above Daytona Beach. He had affixed a harness to his core, one that connected a metal bar across his chest to ...
“There is no sound but the wind. If I lose speed the wind dies away, and there is no sound at all.” - Clements Sohn FOWLER – The grainy 24 seconds of black-and-white video footage shows a two-seat ...
You can see the suit worn by 'Michigan's Batman' Clem Sohn at the Michigan Historical Museum. We look again to Michigan’s past for more stories of pioneers in the field of aviation. This time we find ...
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