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This is a list of aviation-related events from 1935:

Events

  • Employing aerial refueling, a sustained flight record of 653 hours 34&nbsp;minutes (27 days, 5 hours, 34&nbsp;minutes) is set by brothers Al and Fred Key of Meridian, Mississippi. It remains unbroken.
  • Consolidated Aircraft Corporation moves from Buffalo, New York, to San Diego, California.
  • Imperial Japanese Navy dive bombers practice against a full-size mock-up of the United States Navy aircraft carrier Saratoga (CV-3) at the Kashima bombing range.
  • Pan American World Airways builds a seaplane base for its transpacific China Clipper flying boats on Sand Island at Midway Atoll.
  • The Soviet Union has the largest bomber force in the world.
  • The Kalinin K-7 programme ends with the construction of only one K-7, which had been lost in 1933. The end of the programme brings the cancellation of the construction of two additional K-7s.
  • The United States Army places a rotary-wing aircraft in service for the first time when it purchases a Kellet KD-1 autogiro for evaluation. The autogiro is designated the YG-1 in U.S. Army service.
  • Approximately 20 cities in the United States have established radio control of airport traffic. The first — Cleveland Municipal Airport (the future Cleveland Hopkins International Airport) in Cleveland, Ohio — had done so in 1930.

January

thumb|Romanian pilot Irina Burnaia.

  • As apart of the Romanian air tours over Africa, Irina Burnaia starts her journey on 3rd January from Bucharest to Victoria Lake piloting a IAR-22.
  • Helen Richey begins flying as a first officer for Pennsylvania Central Airlines. Operating a Ford Tri-Motor between Washington, D.C., and Detroit, Michigan, via Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Cleveland, Ohio, she is the first female pilot for a regularly scheduled commercial airline.
  • January 11–12 – Amelia Earhart makes the first solo flight from Hawaii to North America, flying from Honolulu to Oakland, California. It is also the first solo flight across any portion of the Pacific Ocean.
  • January 15 – United States Army Air Corps Major James Doolittle establishes a record for a transport flight across the United States, from Los Angeles to Newark, New Jersey, in 11 hours 59&nbsp;minutes.
  • January 26 – During a mail flight, the Hillman's Airways de Havilland Dragon Rapide G-ACPO crashes in bad weather at Derbyhaven on the Isle of Man.
  • January 31 &ndash; During a scheduled passenger flight from Moscow in the Soviet Union to Berlin, Germany, the Deruluft Junkers Ju 52/3mge D-AREN crashes into a hill in fog and rain, killing all 11 people on board.

February

  • February 3 – The German aircraft designer Hugo Junkers dies
  • February 12 – The U.S. Navy rigid airship crashes and sinks in the Pacific Ocean off Point Sur, California. Two of her crewmen die.
  • February 21 – Sisters Jane and Elizabeth Du Bois, daughters of the American consul at Naples, Italy, Coert du Bois, force open the door of a Hillman Airways de Havilland Dragon Rapide airliner in flight and jump to their deaths. Both women had been engaged to be married to pilots killed in the crash of a Royal Air Force flying boat off Sicily on February 15.
  • February 22
  • It becomes illegal for airplanes to fly over the White House in Washington, D.C. President Franklin D. Roosevelts complaint that aircraft disturb his sleep prompts the new law.
  • Robert Watson-Watt and Arnold Wilkins first demonstrate the reflection of radio waves from an aircraft, near Daventry in England; on June 17, the first radio detection of an aircraft by ground-based radar is made at Orford Ness.

March

  • March 1 – The United States Department of War establishes General Headquarters Air Force within the United States Army.
  • March 9 – The Nazi Government in Germany publicly announces the formation of the Luftwaffe in defiance of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles. Hermann Göring is made its commander-in-chief, a position he holds almost until the end of World War II in 1945.
  • March 28 – Robert Goddard launches the world's first successful liquid-fuelled rocket.

April

  • April 1 – Swissair begins services between Zürich and London.
  • April 4 – United Airways Ltd is formed to operate services between England and the Isle of Man.
  • April 13 - Qantas and Imperial Airways provide regular connecting flights between Brisbane, Australia, and London
  • April 16–17 – A Pan American World Airways Sikorsky S-42 makes the first airline survey flight from California to Hawaii, departing from San Francisco and arriving at Pearl Harbor. It is the beginning of the development of an orderly commercial air transportation system in the Pacific Ocean.
  • Frank Hawks arrives at Los Angeles, California, completing a 39-hour 52-minute flight from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to demonstrate the long-range capabilities of the Northrop Gamma 2E attack aircraft to the Argentine Navy, making eight rest and refueling stops along the way. Taking off from Buenos Aires on May 3 with Northrop chief test pilot Gage H. Irving in the plane's gunner's seat, Hawks has broken ten intercity speed records during the 8,090-mile (13,020-km) trip, including on the 3,430-mile (5,523-km) leg from Cristóbal, Panama, to Los Angeles, which he covers in a record-breaking 17 hours 50 minutes.
  • May 18 – A Polikarpov I-5 fighter collides with the Tupolev ANT-20 Maxim Gorky while trying to conduct a loop around Maxim Gorky during a demonstration flight over Moscow. Maxim Gorky crashes near Tushino. Fifty-six people die, making it the worst heavier-than-air crash and second-worst air crash in history at the time, exceeded only by the death toll of 73 in the April 1933 crash of the U.S. Navy dirigible .
  • May 31 – Hickam Field is dedicated in the Territory of Hawaii.
  • June 25 – United States Coast Guard Lieutenant Richard L. Burke sets a world seaplane speed record carrying a load over a course at an average speed of flying a Grumman JF-2 Duck.
  • June 26 – Soviet military balloon pilots Christian Zille and Yury Prilutsky and Professor Alexander Verigo attempt to set a new altitude record for human flight in the balloon USSR-1 Bis. Launching from Moscow's Kuntsevo District, they fall some short of the record when the balloon begins an unexpected descent from an altitude of . As the rate of descent increases dangerously, Verigo bails out at and Prilutsky at , after which Zille manages to bring the descent under control and makes a soft landing in the gondola near Trufanovo in the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic's Tula Oblast. The Soviet government will award all three crew members the Order of Lenin for the flight.
  • June 27 – United States Coast Guard Lieutenant Richard L. Burke sets a world seaplane altitude record of carrying a load, flying a Grumman JF-2 Duck.
  • July 1 – The American flying team The Flying Keys sets an endurance record by flying a Curtiss Robin non-stop for 653 hours, 34&nbsp;minutes in the vicinity of Meridian, Mississippi. During the flight, which began on June 4, the Robin's two-man crew receives fuel, other supplies, and fuel in mid-air from a similar aircraft. The flight covers and uses more than 6,000 gallons (4,996 Imperial gallons; 22,712 liters) of gasoline.
  • July 13 – The Shoreham Airport terminal building is opened at Lancing, England.
  • July 30 &ndash; During United States Navy tests of an instrument flying system, Lieutenant Frank Peak Akers takes off from Naval Air Station San Diego in San Diego, California, in a Berliner-Joyce OJ-2 outfitted with a hooded cockpit to locate and land aboard the aircraft carrier , which is operating at an unspecified location somewhere in the Pacific Ocean about west of California. Flying "blind" the entire way, he uses instrument to find Langley and land safely aboard her. He will receive the Distinguished Flying Cross for his achievement.

August

  • Because of deteriorating relations between Italy and Ethiopia, the British aircraft carriers HMS Courageous and HMS Glorious disembark their aircraft at Alexandria, Egypt, to guard against any outbreak of war spreading to British-controlled territory. The aircraft remain ashore in Egypt until early 1936.
  • August 5 – French aviator Marcel Cagnot takes off in the Farman F.1001 in an attempt to set a new world altitude record. The attempt ends in tragedy when one of the F.1001's cupola windows fail at an altitude of , leading to a rapid decompression and the death of Cagnot.
  • August 15 – Wiley Post, the first pilot to fly solo around the world, and his passenger, the humorist Will Rogers, are killed in the crash of a hybrid Lockheed Orion/Lockheed Explorer aircraft near Point Barrow in the Territory of Alaska.

September

  • September 15 – A Seversky SEV-3 sets a world speed record for piston-engined amphibious airplanes, reaching . The record still stands.
  • September 17 – Professional baseball player Len Koenecke of the Brooklyn Dodgers becomes so drunk on a flight to New York City that he is shackled to his seat and removed from the airliner in Detroit, Michigan. After sleeping in an airport chair there, he charters a plane to take him to Buffalo, New York. While the plane flies over Canada, Koenecke has a disagreement with the pilot and another passenger and attempts to seize control of the plane. To avoid a crash, the pilot and other passenger hit him over the head with a fire extinguisher, and he dies of a cerebral hemorrhage.>
  • September 27 &ndash; The three obsolete biplanes that constitute the entire serviceable strength of the Ethiopian Air Force conduct a flypast as part of a military procession at Addis Ababa for the Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie I, who is trying to prepare Ethiopia for war with Italy.
  • September 30 &ndash; Hillman's Airways, Spartan Air Lines, and United Airways Limited merge to form Allied British Airways, Ltd. The new airline will begin flight operations on January 1, 1936.

October

  • Helen Richey, the first female pilot for a regularly scheduled airline, resigns her position as a first officer at Pennsylvania Central Airlines after 10 months. She had found the experience demeaning: she had received few opportunities to fly; male pilots ignored her or made her uncomfortable in the cockpit, had threatened to strike, and had voted to deny her membership in the Air Lines Pilot Association; and the Bureau of Air Commerce had ordered her grounded in bad weather and had backed the pilots unions request that the airline limit her to three flights per month.
  • October 5 – Italian aircraft conduct a destructive and bloody bombing of Adowa, Ethiopia, after Ethiopian forces had withdrawn from it. The village had been the site of a disastrous defeat of Italian troops by Ethiopian forces in the Battle of Adowa in 1896.
  • October 6 – The Société des Avions Bernard () goes into receivership. It had closed in July.
  • November 22 &ndash; Pan American Airways commences both the first regular transpacific air service to Hawaii and the first transpacific airmail service, flying the Martin M-130 flying boat China Clipper from Alameda, California, to Manila, where it arrives on 29&nbsp;November after overnight stops at Honolulu, Midway Atoll, Wake Island, and Sumay, Guam. The aircraft carries more than 110,000 pieces of mail. Among its crew are pilot Edwin C. Musick and navigator Fred Noonan.
  • November 23 &ndash; As Lincoln Ellsworth and Herbert Hollick-Kenyon fly across Antarctica, they discover mountains which Ellsworth pthorgraphs and names the Sentinel Range. The Sentinel Range is later found to be the northern half of a mountain range which is named the Ellsworth Mountains in honor of Ellsworth.
  • December 6 &ndash; Transcontinental and Western Air's first flight attendants &ndash; known at the time as "air hostesses" &ndash; begin flying, serving passengers aboard the airline's Douglas DC-2 aircraft.
  • December 10 – A Sabena Savoia-Marchetti S.73 crashes into a hillside at Tatsfield, Surrey, in the United Kingdom, killing all 11 people on board. Among the dead is English tank and vehicle designer Sir John Carden.
  • December 15 – The American polar explorer Lincoln Ellsworth and his pilot, Herbert Hollick-Kenyon, arrive on foot at the abandoned base at Little America on the Ross Ice Shelf, completing a journey of about 2,200 miles (3,500 kilometers) from Dundee Island and becoming the first people to fly across Antarctica. The journey — which includes a number of unplanned landings due to problems with navigational equipment and bad weather, a storm that keeps them grounded for three days, a final forced landing when their Northrop Gamma aircraft Polar Star runs out of fuel less than four miles (6 km) from Little America, and a 10-day walk to Little America — has taken an unexpectedly long three and a half weeks, They claim of territory for the United States during their flight. A faulty radio prevents them from reporting their arrival and they are declared missing. Searchers find them alive and well at Little America on 16&nbsp;January 1936.
  • December 26 – General Rodolfo Graziani requests permission from Benito Mussolini to use poison gas against Ethiopian forces. He receives it, and during the last few days of December Italian aircraft begin dropping mustard gas on Ethiopian troops around the Takkaze River and on the village of Jijiga. Italian planes will drop poison gas for the remainder of the war, and continue to use it against Ethiopian guerrillas after the war ends.
  • December 27 – U.S. Army Air Corps bombers from Wheeler Field bomb lava tubes to divert a flow of lava from Mauna Loa that is threatening Hilo, Hawaii. Bombing by U.S. Navy amphibious aircraft diverts lava away from Hilos waterworks.

First flights

  • Arado Ar 81
  • Avro 636
  • Bellanca 31-40 Senior Pacemaker
  • Focke-Wulf Fw 58
  • Focke-Wulf Fw 159
  • Grigorovich E-2 (also known as Grigorovich DG-55)
  • Grigorovich IP-1
  • Henschel Hs 122
  • Miles M.2 Hawk Trainer
  • Miles M.5 Sparrowhawk
  • Miles M.6 Hawcon
  • Northrop 3A
  • Piaggio P.23M
  • Potez 452
  • Potez 60
  • Spring 1935
  • Arado Ar 80
  • Henschel Hs 123
  • Summer 1935 – Ilyushin TsKB-26
  • Autumn 1935 – Hafner A.R.III Gyroplane
  • Late 1935 – Yokosuka B4Y (Allied reporting name "Jean")

January

  • Amiot 142
  • ANF Les Mureaux 117R.2
  • Polikarpov R-Z
  • January 5 – Tachikawa Ki-9 (Allied reporting name "Spruce")
  • January 7 – Avro 652
  • January 10 – Latécoère 521
  • January 18 – Blohm & Voss Ha 137
  • January 28 – Potez 62

February

  • Watanabe E9W (Allied reporting name "Slim"), first Japanese aircraft designed specifically for operation from a submarine
  • February 4 – Mitsubishi A5M (Allied reporting name "Claude")
  • February 5 – Westland CL.20
  • February 21 – Rolls-Royce PV-12 aero engine, prototype of the Rolls-Royce Merlin (in a Hawker Hart)
  • February 24 – Heinkel He 111

March

  • Kawasaki Ki-10 (Allied reporting name "Perry")
  • March 6 – ANF Les Mureaux 115R.2
  • March 24 – Avro Anson military prototype
  • May 11 – Miles M.4 Merlin prototype U-8, later G-ADFE
  • May 19 – Consolidated XPBY-1, prototype of the PBY Catalina
  • May 29 – Messerschmitt Bf 109 V1 D-IABI
  • May 31 – Fairchild Model 45

June

  • Cessna C-34 Airmaster
  • June 4 – Armstrong Whitworth AW.23 K3585
  • June 19 – Vickers Wellesley
  • June 23 – Bristol Bombay K3583
  • June 25 – Grumman J2F-1, first version of the Grumman J2F Duck
  • Tachikawa Ki-17 (Allied reporting name "Cedar")
  • July 6 – Fairchild 82
  • July 11 – Yakovlev AIR-19, prototype of the Yakovlev UT-2
  • July 17 – Boeing Model 299 (US civil "eXperimental" registration NX13372), prototype of the B-17 Flying Fortress
  • July 25 – Latécoère 582
  • July 27 – Miles Falcon Six

August

  • August 8 – Morane-Saulnier MS.405
  • August 9 – Dewoitine D.338
  • August 12 – De Havilland Dragonfly
  • August 15 – Seversky SEV-1XP, prototype of the Seversky P-35
  • August 19
  • CANT Z.506
  • Northrop XBT-1, prototype of the Northrop BT
  • August 21 – Bücker Bü 133 Jungmeister

September

  • Heinkel He 112
  • September 17 – Junkers Ju 87

October

  • October 22 – Dewoitine D.620

November

  • November 6 – Hawker Hurricane K5083

December

  • December 17 – Douglas DST, prototype of the Douglas DC-3
  • December 18 – Miles M.7 Nighthawk
  • December 31 – Avro Anson Mark I, first production version of the Anson

Entered service

  • Aeronca L
  • Beriev MBR-2 with Soviet Naval Aviation
  • Breguet 521 Bizerte with French Naval Aviation
  • Junkers Ju 160 with Deutsche Luft Hansa
  • Levasseur PL.101 with French Naval Aviation aboard the aircraft carrier Béarn
  • Nakajima Ki-4 with the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force
  • Polikarpov R-Z with the Soviet Air Force

January

  • January 28 – Grumman F2F with United States Navy Fighter Squadron 2 (VF-2B) aboard and Fighter Squadron 3 (VF-3B) aboard

March

  • March 11 – Avro 652 with Imperial Airways

July

  • Amiot 143 with the French Air Force

August

  • Avro 636 with the Irish Air Corps

October

  • Nakajima E8N (Allied reporting name "Dave") with the Imperial Japanese Navy

November

  • Hawker Hind
  • Martin M-130 with Pan American Airways

Retirements

  • Westland Interceptor

October

  • Handley Page Hinaidi by the Royal Air Force

References