Something Great: The Adventure of Harriet Quimby
Acclaimed author/illustrator Cheryl Harness is known for her engaging way of bringing the past to life, but never has she written about a real-life character as glamorous and intriguing as HARRIET QUIMBY.
She began her life as a Michigan farm girl. It wasn't long after her family moved to California, before clever, beautiful "Hattie" Quimby was working as an artists' model and sometime-actress in San Francisco. There, in the great city's rambunctious, golden years before the 1906 earthquake, Harriet transformed herself into a photographer and writer. Soon, in 1903, she was on her way to New York City, where she became a popular drama critic, world-traveling photojournalist, and automobile-driving Girl About Town. In her spare time, she wrote half a dozen screenplays for silent film pioneer, D. W. Griffith. And then Harriet learned to FLY.
In August 1911, 36-year-old Harriet Quimby became the FIRST American woman to earn a pilot's license. Soon she was amazing spectators at sensational air shows. The first woman to fly at night? Harriet Quimby. The first professional "aviatrix," earning big bucks with her exhibition flying? Harriet Quimby. What would be next?
On April 16, 1912, in a tiny dragonfly of an aircraft, Harriet flew the 22+ miles across the stormy English Channel, something no female pilot had ever done before. And with nothing but a compass in her lap to help her navigate through the cold clouds. Years later, in 1928, Amelia Earhart would write of her courageous role model:
“Without any of the modern instruments, in a plane which was hardly more than a winged skeleton with a motor, and one, furthermore, with which she was totally unfamiliar, to cross the Channel in 1912 required more bravery and skill than to cross the Atlantic today."
Unfortunately for Harriet, her truly heroic feat was overshadowed in the worldwide shock of news from the "unsinkable" Titanic, lost at sea on her maiden voyage.
Less than three months later, on July 1, 1912, at a Boston air show, a crowd of 5,000 watched Harriet Quimby, in her trademark purple satin flight suit, fall to her death.
Hers is an amazing story, completely true, and truly unforgettable.
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Something Great: The Adventure of Harriet Quimby
Acclaimed author/illustrator Cheryl Harness is known for her engaging way of bringing the past to life, but never has she written about a real-life character as glamorous and intriguing as HARRIET QUIMBY.
She began her life as a Michigan farm girl. It wasn't long after her family moved to California, before clever, beautiful "Hattie" Quimby was working as an artists' model and sometime-actress in San Francisco. There, in the great city's rambunctious, golden years before the 1906 earthquake, Harriet transformed herself into a photographer and writer. Soon, in 1903, she was on her way to New York City, where she became a popular drama critic, world-traveling photojournalist, and automobile-driving Girl About Town. In her spare time, she wrote half a dozen screenplays for silent film pioneer, D. W. Griffith. And then Harriet learned to FLY.
In August 1911, 36-year-old Harriet Quimby became the FIRST American woman to earn a pilot's license. Soon she was amazing spectators at sensational air shows. The first woman to fly at night? Harriet Quimby. The first professional "aviatrix," earning big bucks with her exhibition flying? Harriet Quimby. What would be next?
On April 16, 1912, in a tiny dragonfly of an aircraft, Harriet flew the 22+ miles across the stormy English Channel, something no female pilot had ever done before. And with nothing but a compass in her lap to help her navigate through the cold clouds. Years later, in 1928, Amelia Earhart would write of her courageous role model:
“Without any of the modern instruments, in a plane which was hardly more than a winged skeleton with a motor, and one, furthermore, with which she was totally unfamiliar, to cross the Channel in 1912 required more bravery and skill than to cross the Atlantic today."
Unfortunately for Harriet, her truly heroic feat was overshadowed in the worldwide shock of news from the "unsinkable" Titanic, lost at sea on her maiden voyage.
Less than three months later, on July 1, 1912, at a Boston air show, a crowd of 5,000 watched Harriet Quimby, in her trademark purple satin flight suit, fall to her death.
Hers is an amazing story, completely true, and truly unforgettable.
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Something Great: The Adventure of Harriet Quimby

Something Great: The Adventure of Harriet Quimby

by Cheryl Harness
Something Great: The Adventure of Harriet Quimby

Something Great: The Adventure of Harriet Quimby

by Cheryl Harness

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Overview

Acclaimed author/illustrator Cheryl Harness is known for her engaging way of bringing the past to life, but never has she written about a real-life character as glamorous and intriguing as HARRIET QUIMBY.
She began her life as a Michigan farm girl. It wasn't long after her family moved to California, before clever, beautiful "Hattie" Quimby was working as an artists' model and sometime-actress in San Francisco. There, in the great city's rambunctious, golden years before the 1906 earthquake, Harriet transformed herself into a photographer and writer. Soon, in 1903, she was on her way to New York City, where she became a popular drama critic, world-traveling photojournalist, and automobile-driving Girl About Town. In her spare time, she wrote half a dozen screenplays for silent film pioneer, D. W. Griffith. And then Harriet learned to FLY.
In August 1911, 36-year-old Harriet Quimby became the FIRST American woman to earn a pilot's license. Soon she was amazing spectators at sensational air shows. The first woman to fly at night? Harriet Quimby. The first professional "aviatrix," earning big bucks with her exhibition flying? Harriet Quimby. What would be next?
On April 16, 1912, in a tiny dragonfly of an aircraft, Harriet flew the 22+ miles across the stormy English Channel, something no female pilot had ever done before. And with nothing but a compass in her lap to help her navigate through the cold clouds. Years later, in 1928, Amelia Earhart would write of her courageous role model:
“Without any of the modern instruments, in a plane which was hardly more than a winged skeleton with a motor, and one, furthermore, with which she was totally unfamiliar, to cross the Channel in 1912 required more bravery and skill than to cross the Atlantic today."
Unfortunately for Harriet, her truly heroic feat was overshadowed in the worldwide shock of news from the "unsinkable" Titanic, lost at sea on her maiden voyage.
Less than three months later, on July 1, 1912, at a Boston air show, a crowd of 5,000 watched Harriet Quimby, in her trademark purple satin flight suit, fall to her death.
Hers is an amazing story, completely true, and truly unforgettable.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940014515306
Publisher: Cheryl Harness
Publication date: 04/15/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 884,505
File size: 40 KB

About the Author

As an author and illustrator, Cheryl Harness has created historical picture books about such subjects as Three Young Pilgrims (the story of the pioneering colonists at Plymouth, complete with intricate maps and a cutaway of the Mayflower), The Amazing Impossible Erie Canal, The Remarkable Benjamin Franklin, even a lighthearted primer on the Presidency: Ghosts of the White House. Her 2006 coming-of-age novel, Just For You to Know, received glowing reviews. In the course of writing and/or illustrating more than 40 books, she has earned a reputation for engaging storytelling, her well-researched and highly detailed illustrations as well as her entertaining presentations on CSPAN, at presidential libraries, and to elementary school students around the country. Now she turns her talents to telling about the life of an overlooked heroine of the early 20th century: photojournalist and aviation pioneer Harriet Quimby, the first American woman to earn a pilot's license, FIRST woman to fly solo across the stormy English Channel in the spring of 1912.
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