Intercollegiate Aeronautical Association of America.

Dates:
Active 1910
Active 1913

Biographical notes:

On Saturday morning April 30, 1910, at the invitation of the University of Pennsylvania Aero Club, delegates from a number of the colleges and universities met in convention at Houston Hall, University of Pennsylvania, for the purpose of forming an Intercollegiate Aeronautical Association. Delegates from the following founding schools were present at the convention:Cornell University, Haverford College, Princeton University, Swarthmore College, Tufts University, University of Pennsylvania, University of Virginia. Other interested schools, unable to send delegates to the convention, expressed their support for the formation of the Association: Amherst College, Carnegie Technical Institute, Columbia University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Notre Dame, University of Chicago, University of Cincinnati, Yale University. The first officers elected for the year 1910-1911 were:President George A. Richardson University of Pennsylvania;Vice-President Cyrus McCormick Princeton University; 2nd Vice-President Dr. R.N. Bird University of Virginia; Secretary Elmer Rae Cornell University; Asst. Secretary Thomas Midgely Cornell University; Treasurer S.S. Morris Haverford College. The constitutional objective of the Intercollegiate Aeronautical Association of America (IAAA) was "To arouse and stimulate interest in the science and sport of aerostation and aviation among the colleges and universities of America, to hold intercollegiate contests, meets, exhibitions, etc.; to work for the establishment of Chairs of Aeronautical Science in the various educational institutions; to place aerostation and aviation on a level with other forms of college activities." The main correspondent in this collection is George Atwell Richardson, President of the IAAA. Richardson was born on May 30, 1886 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He earned a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering in 1912 and the professional degree of Mechanical Engineer in 1914, both from the University of Pennsylvania. As a student, Richardson was a member of the University of Pennsylvania Aero Club, a member of the Executive Committee of the National Council of Aero Clubs of America and founding President of the IAAA. As part of his duties for the IAAA, he helped organize the first intercollegiate glider meet on May 27-29, 1911 at Harvard University and the first intercollegiate balloon race in June 1911 at North Adams, Massachusetts. The University of Pennsylvania Aero Club sponsored a balloon called the "Philadelphia II" in the 1911 race. A.F. Atherholt piloted the balloon and Richardson captained it. According to the rules of the race, the balloon that covered the longest distance won the race. The "Philadelphia II" won the race after flying 115 miles from North Adams, Massachusetts to West Peabody, Massachusetts at heights reaching up to 12,000 feet. During his years at Penn, Richardson gave popular lectures about aeronautics at various colleges, universities and other places including the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. His illustrated lectures included lantern slides and moving picture footage of the making and flying of various types of flying machines. Richardson also contributed articles regarding student life at the University of Pennsylvania to the magazine The Intercollegiate. After finishing school, he served in the Sixth Division Home Defense Reserves during WWI. He spent his engineering career working for companies including the Bethlehem Steel Co. and the Midvale Steel and Ordinance Company. Richardson died at the age of 90 on January 11, 1976. This collection does not give information about the duration of the IAAA. By April 1911, George A. Richardson was writing various people seeking funds to file the Associations incorporation and complaining that only three university Aero Clubs paid dues to the IAAA. The last piece of correspondence in the collection dates to 1913 and inquires about Richardsons activities after he had not written the correspondent in a while and about the illness of his father.

From the description of Collection, 1910-1913. (University of Pennsylvania). WorldCat record id: 145429382

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