This is an iHeart Podcast. This Labor Day, say goodbye to spills, stains, and overpriced furniture with washable sofas.com, featuring Anibay, the only machine washable sofa inside and out, where designer quality meets budget-friendly pricing.
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Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions. may apply. iHeart presents the Big Three Playoffs. This Sunday, the remaining four teams battle to make their championship in the most physical, fierce, and competitive basketball league in the world. The action starts with the Big Three Monster Energy Celebrity Game.
Then Dwight Howard and his LA Riot take on Montrez Harrell and Dr. J Chicago Triplets. The finale will see popular Miami 305 with stars MVP Michael Beasley and Lamb Stevenson take on Nancy Lieberman's Dallas Power, who will make it to the Big Three Championship. The no-holds bought action starts Sunday at 3 p.m. Eastern, 12 Pacific, only on CBS.
Good morning. Welcome to Today. From back to school to tackling your to-do list, the Today Show is your best start to the day. It's a new season and every morning. We're here to help you take it all off.
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This is our American Stories and our next story comes to us from a man who's simply known as the history guy. His videos are watched by hundreds of thousands of people of all ages on YouTube. The history guy is also heard here. at Our American Stories, where he's a regular contributor. Here's the history guy with the fascinating story about the Medal of Honor recipient, Rear Admiral Richard Byrd.
The Age of Polar Exploration. and the future of aviation. We live in an era where air travel is common. According to the International Civil Aviation Organization, 3.5 billion passengers were carried by scheduled air service in 2015. But if you've flown, the odds are that you flew in a heavier-than-air aircraft, and the general alternative, lighter-than-air air travel is largely relegated to a leisure activity.
But that was not always the case. There was a time when great airships challenged the airplane for dominion of the skies. And the pinnacle of that era was arguably in 1926, with a competition between two of the world's greatest explorers. It's history that deserves to be remembered. In general, aircraft come in two categories.
A lighter-than-air aircraft, or aerostat, works by principles of buoyancy. The average density of the craft is lower than the density of atmospheric air, and so rises. Essentially, a bag filled with gas that is less dense than air produces lift. The alternative, aerodynes, fly due to aerodynamic lift, which requires movement of a wing surface through an air mass. In the 1920s, the competition between Aerostat and Aerodyne took on a particular importance.
terms of polar exploration. The period of the end of the 19th century and the first years of the 20th century included what was the so-called heroic age of polar exploration. Explorers from a number of nations went to explore the most hostile and least understood environments on Earth, in both the Arctic and the Antarctic. This was called the heroic age because technology was limited. Conditions were primitive, and the exploration was extremely dangerous and, very often, deadly.
These explorers risked their lives in scientific pursuits, putting their lives on the line for the betterment of the world. These explorations made huge contributions to science, but national prestige was also on the line. Scientific discoveries in first represented national honor, and nations saw it as a way to prove themselves on the international stage. One of the most significant of these contests was the race to get to the polls. Despite little real scientific value in reaching the North and South Poles, they represented the pinnacle of remote exploration at the time.
for the first time, seemed to be within reach. Being the first to reach one of the poles would gain an explorer, international fame. Norwegian Rold Amundsen was one of the legendary explorers of the heroic age. Born into a family of Norwegian shipbuilders in 1872, he had been inspired by explorers of the 1880s. Between 1910 and 1912, Amundsen led the first expedition to reach the South Pole using sled dogs and arrived at the South Pole on December 14, 1911.
Five weeks ahead of a rival team led by British explorer Robert Falcon Scott, who died on his return trip. But sometime in the early 1920s, most historians cite the 1920-21 Quest expedition in which legendary explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton died. The heroic age of polar exploration gave way to the mechanical age of polar exploration. The mechanical age of exploration represented a time when the mechanical advancements of the age, notably aircraft and motor cars, changed the nature and method of polar exploration.
Now the exploration was not only a test of humans, but of machines. Discovery not only meant national prestige, but it represented the reliability of modern technology. It could mean a fortune for the companies who built those technologies. And the pinnacle achievement of the mechanical age, the race to be the first to overfly the North Pole, represented two of the greatest explorers. of the era.
Born in Virginia in 1888, Richard E. Byrne was the quintessential example of the mechanical age of exploration. A pilot with the U.S. Navy during the First World War, he had planned the flight path for the first Atlantic crossing by air, done by the U.S. Navy in Curtis Flynn boats.
In 1925, he commanded the aviation unit of an expedition to northern Greenland to become convinced of the value of aircraft in Arctic exploration. In 1925, Amundsen had tried to fly to the North Pole using flying boats, but when one was damaged during a landing, he and his crew barely made it out with their lives. he became convinced that the best possibility to cross the pole by air was to use an airship. and planned an expedition for 1926. The same year, Richard Byrd, then a lieutenant commander of the United States Navy, became determined to fly to the pole in an airplane.
It was now a race between Roald Emundson and Richard Bird. was also a race between Aerostat and Aerodon. While an airplane was faster, as Admundson had learned in his attempt in 1925, if anything went wrong, they had to sit down right away. is not always possible in the Arctic, and taking off again might be impossible. An airship, while slower, could repair its engines in flight, if need be.
airships also carry more weight. Amundsen signed a contract with Italian airship designer Umberto Nobli to use his semi-rigid airship, then called the N1. The N1 was 347 feet 9 inches long and 85 feet 4 inches in diameter, powered by three six-cylinder engines. The N1 was officially sold to the Arrow Club of Norway, which was financing the expedition. was modified for cold conditions and renamed the Norg, meaning the Norway.
A wealthy American explorer named Lincoln Ellsworth also helped to finance the expedition and accompanied Amundsen and Nobley on the trip. After several weather delays and a wait to build a docking tower at their jumping-off point at the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, They finally arrived in April of 1926. For his flight, Bird decided to use a three-engine monoplane built by the Dutch airplane manufacturer Fokker. The Fokker F7, commonly called the Fokker Trimotor, was one of those popular passenger aircraft of the 1920s. Burt needed financing, so he had named the plane Josephine Ford after automobile manufacturer Edsel Ford's daughter in order to procure a donation from Ford to fund the trip.
When Bird's ship carrying the Josephine Ford steamed into Kings Bay on Spitsbergen, he found Abmundsen's ship already taking the only space at the dock. Bird was forced to lash the ship's lifeboats together to carry his airplane to shore. Byrd made his attempt, accompanied by pilot Floyd Bennett, on May 9th. No one had ever taken off using a Fokker trimotor on skis before and it took three attempts to take off. Eight hours in, one of the engines started leaking oil.
Bennett wanted to sit down and try to fix the problem, but the ice below was broken with no place to land. Berg decided to press on as they were only an hour from the pole. At just over nine hours in, they reached the North Pole. winning the race. The return was dicey given the oil leak, but the plane was lighter as it had burned so much fuel and made it back to Spitsbergen.
Byrd returned to international acclaim. and the United States awarded him. The Medal of Honor. The Norg made its trip two days later, leaving May 11th and reaching the pole on the 12th, three days after Berg. As they crossed the pole, Amundsen, Ellsworth, and Nobley each threw out their nation's flag to land on the pole.
While Byrd had beaten them to the pole, the Norg was the first to fly over the ice cap between Europe and North America. making the voyage important to the understanding of the nature of the ice cap and its geography. But of course, there was a twist. Almost immediately, there were questions whether Brett's calculations were correct. arguing that given the plane's airspeed, it must have come short of the pole.
The controversy became even more heated in 1996 when Bird's diary was released and showed erased but still legible sextant recorders that differ from the official report. The controversy rages on today. Byrd went on to become the first person to fly over the South Pole in 1929. became an admiral and in World War II was a special advisor to Chief of Naval Operations Ernest King. He was present for the Japanese surrender in Tokyo Bay on September 2, 1945, and helped to establish permanent Antarctic bases in the 1940s and 50s.
He died of a heart ailment in 1957, the age of 68. For a while, airships competed against airplanes and ocean liners for passenger service, but they lost their appeal after the spectacular explosion of the Zeppelin Hindenburg. In 1937. And fate played a strange trick on Roald Emotson and Umberto Noble. In 1928, Nobly built another airship, named it the Italia, or the Italy, and attempted to make an all-Italian flight over the North Pole.
They reached the pole on May 24th, but the following day, caught in a gale, the Italian crashed into jagged ice, destroying the airship. In all, eight of the crew lost their lives, and it took nearly two months to rescue the survivors. And in that, another tragedy. Bold Amundsen, being one of the most experienced Arctic explorers in the world, was called to assist in the rescue. On June 18th, 1928, flying in dense fog, the plane in which he was flying, along with five other crew members, searching for survivors of the Italia.
Disappear. The plane and the remains of the crew were never found. Amundsen was 55. Umberto Nobli survived the wreck of the Italia and passed away in 1978 at the age of 93. The last survivor of the 1926 race to the pole that represented the golden age of the competition.
between erostat and aerodynamic. An age that deserves to be remembered. Indeed, and it's why we bring you these stories. A great story, the 1926 treacherous race to the polls here. on our American stories.
This Labor Day, say goodbye to spills, stains, and overpriced furniture with washable sofas.com, featuring Anibay, the only machine washable sofa inside and out, where designer quality meets budget-friendly pricing.
Sofas start at just $6.99, making it the perfect time to upgrade your space. Anibay's pet-friendly, stain-resistant, and interchangeable slip covers are made with high-performance fabric built for real life. You'll love the cloud-like comfort of hypoallergenic, high-resilience foam that never needs fluffing and a durable steel frame that stands the test of time. With modular pieces, you can rearrange any time. It's a sofa that adapts to your life.
Now through Labor Day, get up to 60% off site-wide at washablesofas.com. Every order comes with a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. If you're not in love, send it back for a full refund. No return shipping, no restocking fees, every penny back. Shop now at washablesofas.com.
Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply. Mm. iHeart presents the Big Three Playoffs. This Sunday, the remaining four teams battle to make the championship in the most physical, fierce, and competitive basketball league in the world. The action starts with the Big Three Monster Energy Celebrity Game.
Then Dwight Howard and his LA Ryan take on Montrez Harrell and Dr. J Chicago Triplets. The finale will see popular Miami 305 with stars MVP Michael Beasley and Len Stevenson take on Nancy Lieberman's Dallas Power, who will make it to the Big Three Championship. The no-holds bought action starts Sunday at 3 p.m. Eastern, 12 Pacific, only on CBS.
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