Clarence Gilbert Taylor

Clarence Gilbert Taylor (September 8, 1898 – March 29, 1988) was an early aviation entrepreneur and co-founder of the Taylor Brothers Aircraft Corporation (later named the Piper Aircraft Corporation) in Rochester, New York. He was the designer of the Taylor Cub, which led to the creation of the Piper Cub, one of the most popular airplanes in history.[1]

Biography

Gilbert was born on September 8, 1898 in Rochester, New York to Arthur and Clara (née Makin) Taylor, who had immigrated to the United States from Nottingham, England in 1889.[2] He was one of six children that included Gordon A. Taylor (Jan. 15, 1902 — Apr. 24, 1928). Gilbert co-founded the Taylor Brothers Aircraft Corporation with Gordon in 1927. A year later, Gordon was killed, along with an early sales agent for the brothers' aircraft, during a demonstration flight for a prototype of the airplane "Chummy" at the Ford Airport in Dearborn, Michigan.

After his brother's death, Gilbert moved the company to Bradford, Pennsylvania, where he remained until 1936.[3] During his time in Bradford, the company was renamed to the Taylor Aircraft Company after investor William T. Piper bought the assets of the company in 1930. Piper kept Gilbert on as president, but after clashes between the two, Piper bought Gilbert out and he left to start Taylorcraft Aviation in 1935. Two years later, Piper renamed the company to what is now known as Piper Aircraft. It went on to build more than 20,000 Taylor-designed Piper Cubs, the most-produced fabric-covered aircraft of all time.

gollark: I don't understand what you're trying to suggest it means.
gollark: This paper is just documenting a design for jet engine nozzles.
gollark: *But* likely irrelevant to whatever you're on about.
gollark: Aerospike engines are, as far as I know, a thing which does actually exist and has some amount of use.
gollark: Well, you actually have a specific target, so I'll look.

References

  1. Goyer, Robert (August 3, 2012). "Piper Cub: Aviation's Holy Relic". Flying. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
  2. "C. Gilbert Taylor, 89, Inventor of Small Plane". The New York Times. April 12, 1988. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
  3. Bednarek, Janet R. Daly; Bednarek, Michael H. (2003). Dreams of Flight: General Aviation in the United States. Texas A&M University Press p. 58. ISBN 978-1-5854-4257-7.


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