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#Douglas Corrigan
newyorkthegoldenage · 9 months
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Aviators were lionized in the 1920s and 1930s, even when they screwed up. That can be the only explanation for why the city threw a ticker tape parade for Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan, who took off from Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn on July 17, 1938, with the stated intention of flying to California. He wound up in Dublin instead.
When Corrigan returned to New York (by ship), he was met with wild acclaim. On August 5, he was the hero of a ticker tape parade. In fact, attendance at the parade exceeded that of the parade given to Charles Lindbergh eleven years earlier.
Eventually, it became known that the flight to Ireland was no mistake at all, but the story was too good to let die.
Photo: Associated Press via the OC Register
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citizenscreen · 9 months
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Lupe Vélez and Melvyn Douglas in Lloyd Corrigan’s THE BROKEN WING (1932)
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dailyhistoryposts · 2 years
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On This Day In History
July 17th, 1938: American aviator Douglas Corrigan, set to fly from Brooklyn to Long Beach, California, flies the wrong way across the Atlantic Ocean to Ireland due to a claimed 'navigational error'. He is since remembered as "Wrong Way" Corrigan (he almost certainly did it on purpose, but refused to admit it).
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thebetterbear · 2 years
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Post Modern Art
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Fred Tomaselli, 2014, 60″ x 84″, photo-collage, leaves, acrylic and resin on wood panel, © 2014, courtesy of James Cohan Gallery and the artist
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Meow Wolf. Sept. 13, 2021.
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Ashley Frazier, Michael Sperandeo
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Paneel "Rehearsal for an Icon 2001 - Mona Lisa" von Olbinski, Grafikdruck. Digital Print
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Untitled (Studio)2014
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 Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, 1503-6; On Winnie: Denis Colomb stoles (worn as a headdress, top and sleeves) 
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Harley Quinn in Suicide Squad David Ayer 2016 (left), Harley Quinn in Birds of Prey Cathy Yann 2021 (right)
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Jane Alexander, Butcher Boys, 1985/86, mixed media (Iziko South African National Gallery, Cape Town, photo: Goggins World, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
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A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby (2014). Kara Walker Photo: Andrew Burton/Getty Images
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kwebtv · 2 years
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Wyatt Earp Return to Tombstone  -  CBS  -  July 1, 1994
Western 
Running Time:  100 minutes
Stars:
Hugh O'Brian as Wyatt Earp
Bruce Boxleitner as Sheriff Sam, Sheriff of Cochise County
Paul Brinegar as Jim "Dog" Kelly
Harry Carey Jr. as "Digger" Phelps
Bo Hopkins as "Rattlesnake" Reynolds
Alex Hyde-White as Woodworth Clum
Martin Kove as Ed Ross
Don Meredith as Clay, The Bartender
Jay Underwood as Jack Montgomery
Douglas Fowley as John "Doc" Holliday / "Doc" Fabrique (flashback sequences)
John Anderson as Virgil Earp (flashback sequence)
Dirk London as Morgan Earp (flashback sequence)
Rayford Barnes as Joe "Ike" Clanton (flashback sequence)
Steve Brodie as Sheriff Johnny Behan (flashback sequence)
Lloyd Corrigan as Ned Buntline (flashback sequence)
Nancy Hale as Miss Sally (flashback sequence)
Trevor Bardette as Old Man Clanton (flashback sequence)
Norman Alden as Johnny Ringo (flashback sequence)
Gregg Palmer as Tom McLowery (flashback sequence)
George D. Wallace as Frank McLowery (flashback sequence)
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brookstonalmanac · 3 months
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Birthdays 1.22
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Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan; pilot (1907)
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robertmatola · 8 months
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Historia, jakiej nie znacie: Douglas Corrigan, szalony pogromca Atlantyku
http://dlvr.it/SvZL7D
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maximumtalewonderland · 10 months
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Douglas “Wrong Way” Corrigan crosses the Atlantic
Douglas Corrigan, the last of the early glory-seeking fliers, takes off from Floyd Bennett field in Brooklyn, New York, on a flight that would finally win him a place in aviation history.
Eleven years earlier, American Charles A. Lindbergh had become an international celebrity with his solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic. Corrigan was among the mechanics who had worked on Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis aircraft, but that mere footnote in the history of flight was not enough for the Texas-born aviator. In 1938, he bought a 1929 Curtiss Robin aircraft off a trash heap, rebuilt it, and modified it for long-distance flight. In July 1938, Corrigan piloted the single-engine plane nonstop from California to New York. Although the transcontinental flight was far from unprecedented, Corrigan received national attention simply because the press was amazed that his rattletrap aircraft had survived the journey.
Almost immediately after arriving in New York, he filed plans for a transatlantic flight, but aviation authorities deemed it a suicide flight, and he was promptly denied. Instead, they would allow Corrigan to fly back to the West Coast, and on July 17 he took off from Floyd Bennett field, ostentatiously pointed west. However, a few minutes later, he made a 180-degree turn and vanished into a cloudbank to the puzzlement of a few onlookers.
Twenty-eight hours later, Corrigan landed his plane in Dublin, Ireland, stepped out of his plane, and exclaimed, “Just got in from New York. Where am I?” He claimed that he lost his direction in the clouds and that his compass had malfunctioned. The authorities didn’t buy the story and suspended his license, but Corrigan stuck to it to the amusement of the public on both sides of the Atlantic. By the time “Wrong Way” Corrigan and his crated plane returned to New York by ship, his license suspension had been lifted, he was a national celebrity, and a mob of autograph seekers met him on the gangway.
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uapro · 10 months
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Today in Strangeness:
On this day in 1955, Disneyland opened its doors in Anaheim, CA. By all accounts it was a disaster, women's heels sunk into the asphalt, rides broke down, and there was a gas leak. On July 17, 1933, pilot Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan took off on a flight from New York to California, but ended up flying overseas to Ireland, due to what he claimed was a navigational error.
Species Extinction / Astrology & Healing:
Scientist, author, lecturer, and species explorer, Quentin Wheeler, has named more than 100 species new to science, and published more than 175 scientific papers. On Monday's show, he'll reveal why he believes we have entered the first mass extinction event since the disappearance of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Followed by author, social worker, and astrologer Carmen Turner-Schott, who began her astrological work at 16 after an experience with a glowing ball of light, which led her to study metaphysics and the Edgar Cayce material. She'll discuss consciousness, energy, and how astrology can be a tool to heal and create changes.
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juliehowlin · 10 months
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Compass Day
Compass Day, also known as Wrong Way Corrigan Day because on this date in 1938, an aviator called Douglas Corrigan took off from New York, telling authorities he was going to Los Angeles, but 28 hours later, landed in Ireland. He claimed he was following the wrong end of the compass needle.
10 things you might not know about compasses:
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theresah331 · 2 years
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formeroklahoman · 2 years
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☞Wrong Way!
☞Today in History -- On today’s date 84 years ago, Monday, July 18, 1938, famous Native-Texan, Irish-American aviation pioneer Douglas “Wrong Way” Corrigan (1907-1995) landed at Baldonnel Ærodrome in County Dublin, Ireland 28 hours & 13 minutes after he had departed from Floyd Bennett Airfield in Brooklyn, New York -- supposedly on his way to California!
☞Corrigan, a skilled aircraft mechanic, & one of the builders of Charles Lindbergh’s famous “Spirit of St. Louis,” had bought a second-hand 1929 Curtiss Robin OX-5 monoplane for $310 in 1933. After installing an engine built from parts of two old Wright Whirlwind J6-5 engines & adding extra fuel tanks, he applied to the Bureau of Air Commerce in 1935, seeking permission to make a non-stop flight from New York to Ireland. The application was rejected -- his æroplane was deemed unsound for a non-stop transatlantic trip, although it was certified to the lower standard for cross-country journeys.
☞After a transcontinental flight from Long Beach, California to New York, Corrigan flew from Brooklyn, New York to Ireland, although his flight plan was filed to return to Long Beach. He claimed that his unauthorized flight was due to a navigational error caused by heavy cloud cover that obscured landmarks, & by low-light conditions, causing him to misread his compass. He also claimed that he didn’t notice his “error” until 26 hours into his flight -- too late to turn back.
☞Corrigan received only a mild punishment for his illegal flight -- a fourteen-day suspension of his pilot’s certificate.
☞Wrong Way Corrigan & his æroplane returned to New York on the luxury liner “SS Manhattan” -- arriving on August 4, 1938 -- the last day of his license suspension. His return was marked with great celebration. More people attended Wrong Way Corrigan’s August 5, 1938 ticker-tape parade on Broadway than had honored Charles Lindbergh at the parade celebrating the very first solo transatlantic flight!
☞The 1938 photograph depicts Wrong Way Corrigan at around the age of 31.
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bharathidasanprabhu · 2 years
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WRONG WAY CORRIGAN DAY (One pilot and his legendary flight can inspire millions, and that is exactly what Wrong Way Corrigan Day is celebrating on July 17 each year. This day marks the transatlantic flight of stunt pilot Douglas Corrigan, who flew his plane on an unauthorized flight from New York to Ireland. He famously claimed he went the wrong way, hence his nickname — ‘Wrong Way’ Corrigan.) - 17 JULY 2022 - தவறான வழி கோரிகன் தினம் (ஒரு விமானி மற்றும் அவரது புகழ்பெற்ற விமானம் மில்லியன் கணக்கானவர்களை ஊக்குவிக்கும், அதைத்தான் ஒவ்வொரு ஆண்டும் ஜூலை 17 அன்று தவறான வழி கோரிகன் தினம் கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது. நியூயார்க்கில் இருந்து அயர்லாந்திற்கு அங்கீகரிக்கப்படாத விமானத்தில் தனது விமானத்தை ஓட்டிச் சென்ற ஸ்டண்ட் பைலட் டக்ளஸ் கோரிகனின் அட்லாண்டிக் கடற்பயணத்தை இந்த நாள் குறிக்கிறது. அவர் தவறான வழியில் சென்றதாக அவர் பிரபலமாகக் கூறினார், எனவே அவரது புனைப்பெயர் - 'தவறான வழி' கொரிகன்.) - 17 ஜூலை 2022.
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rollsoffthetongue · 2 years
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FLY BY THE SEAT OF YOUR PANTS
Idiomatic Meaning: Decide a course of action as you go along, using your own initiative, perceptions and senses rather than a predetermined plan or mechanical aids; do something difficult without the necessary skill or experience.
Literal Meaning: Using a part of pants which covers one’s rear end to propel oneself in the air.
Usage: Informal, spoken American and British English.
Origin: Early 20th Century – British and American English. This expression comes from the early days of aviation. Aircraft initially had few navigation aids and flying was accomplished by means of the pilot's judgment and senses. The term emerged in the 1930s and was first widely used in reports of Douglas Corrigan's flight from the USA to Ireland in 1938. That flight was reported in many US newspapers of the day, including one story, titled 'Corrigan Flies By The Seat Of His Pants', in The Edwardsville Intelligencer. The phrase implies that instead of using one’s head (to formulate a plan) one is using one’s rear end, which lacks intelligence. It is possible that the original expression referred to “trousers” rather than “pants”, the former being a British term, and the latter, the American version. (In England “pants” is an undergarment). Corrigan eventually became famous and known as “Wrong Way Corrigan”, even starring in a movie about his flight. [Thanks to phrases.org.uk]
Why is this funny? In this photo, we see two people in fancy, colorful flight suits in mid-air, facing each other in a seated position, with their arms outstretched, looking as if they might be flying. In fact, they are two sky divers, and the photo has caught them in mid decent. They are actually hurtling towards the earth at 120 miles per hour. But because they are still a long way from crashing, they are having a chat. One asks the other what they should do now. The other responds that they will figure it out as they fly, perhaps with their arms or perhaps with their butts, also know as the seat of their pants. They have no set plan they will just “fly by the seat of their pants.”
Sample Sentence: Trump tried to run the White House the same way he ran his business, “by the seat of his pants.”
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taraross-1787 · 2 years
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This Day in History: “Wrong Way” Corrigan
On this day in 1907, Douglas Corrigan is born. He would earn the nickname “Wrong Way” Corrigan because of an accidental 1938 flight across the Atlantic in a single-engine plane.
Or perhaps it wasn’t an accident at all.
Corrigan had helped to build Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis, and he’d long wanted to make his own trip from New York to Ireland. Was it a planned “accidental trip”?
Corrigan had purchased and modified a Curtiss Model 50 Robin B monoplane in the early 1930s. The plane had been in terrible shape when Corrigan purchased it, but he tinkered with it and got the plane working. He replaced the 90-horsepower engine with a 165-horsepower one, and he installed extra fuel tanks at the front of the plane.
The tanks blocked the front windows, so Corrigan would have to fly without the ability to see directly in front of him.
Corrigan soon applied to the Bureau of Commerce, seeking permission for a trans-Atlantic flight. Actually, he applied repeatedly. One can only speculate that he got tired of the constant “no’s” and the bureaucratic assessment that his plane was unsuitable for the trip.
He was apparently ready to take matters into his own hands by 1938.
The story continues at the link in the comments.
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whattolearntoday · 3 years
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July 17th is...
Lottery Day -  Lotteries date back to the 15th century. While early lotteries funded village needs by feeding and clothing the poor, they also strengthened defenses.  In the United States, early lotteries paid for cannons during the American Revolution. Lottery money also paved roads up and down the East Coast. Today, states own and operate the lotteries. The funds they gather support government programs and the communities they serve.
Peach Ice Cream Day -  Since peaches begin peaking in July, this celebration comes just in time. It also lands right in the middle of National Ice Cream Month. So, it’s an excellent time to add peach ice cream to the growing list of flavors to choose from when it comes to frozen, creamy treats.
Strawberry Rhubarb Wine Day - It may be difficult for the common person to classify rhubarb. Is it a fruit? Is it a vegetable? While technically rhubarb may be known as a tart perennial vegetable, combining it with strawberries creates a unique flavor. Some even consider it the perfect balance of tart and sweet. Rhubarb even went to court over the matter. In 1947 in a customs court in Buffalo, New York, the court ruled that since rhubarb is used as a fruit in the United States, for the purposes of regulations and duties, it was to be counted as a fruit. And from the wine perspective, that’s a good thing. Fruit wines sound so much better than vegetable wine. 
Tattoo Day - Recognizes the history, culture, and artists dedicated to etching ink permanently on the skin. Evidence of humans marking their bodies with permanent designs have existed for thousands of years. Egyptian and ice mummies reveal several forms of religious and status symbols. The word “tattoo” is derived from the Polynesian language for tatau, which means “to tap or to mark.” Around the world, cultures surrounding tattooing vary, and some have changed very little over time.
Toss Away The “Would Haves” and “Should Haves” Day - This day is intended for everyone to let go of the past and live for the present. The first step to participating in this day is to find a pen and paper. Then write down your “could haves” and “should haves” on the paper. Finally, throw away the list.
World Emoji Day - The day encourages us to use emojis to send unique messages. Before the emoji, there were emoticons. Emoticons (emotion + icon) were developed as an expression of emotions in the cold hard texts that were devoid of them. Emoji, a Japanese expression, roughly means “picture word” and was created by Shigetaka Kurita.
Wrong Way Corrigan Day - Commemorates the transatlantic flight of an Irish-American stunt pilot from Galveston, Texas. Douglas Corrigan gained notoriety for an unplanned transatlantic flight to Ireland on July 17, 1938. In 1938, the young stunt pilot flew from his home in California to New York. With only a magnetic compass, Corrigan advised officials he was returning to California. According to the story, after takeoff, cloud cover prevented Corrigan from accurate navigation. When Corrigan dropped below the clouds hours later, he saw nothing but water. Then Corrigan realized his navigation was off. Despite the confusion, he continued on his journey. Surprisingly, 28 hours later, he landed in Ireland. 
Yellow Pig Day - The date was created when two students were working on the special properties of the number 17. In the end, they created the yellow pig. Why a yellow pig? Well, it could simply be random or it could be to do with a collection of yellow pigs that one of the students had. One thing that is easier to explain, though, is why the two students – Michael Spivak and David Kelly – were obsessing over the number 17. This is because the number 17 is a prime number and it is significant in the world of math. This is because it is the sum of the first four prime numbers. If you add 2, 3, 5 and 7, you’re going to get 17. There are a number of different studies that have shown that most people choose the number 17 when they are asked to choose between the number 1 and 20. Therefore, this is why the two students were delving into the number 17 and doing their research on it, and this is also how Yellow Pig Day was created. 
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