1911 Chicago International Aviation Meet
File:1911 International Aviation Meet Postcard (Front).png
The 1911 Chicago International Aviation Meet (August 12 to August 20, 1911) was major aviation show held at Grant Park in Chicago, Illinois, United States in August 1911.Souter, Gerry (28 June 2010) [https://web.archive.org/web/20101120125005/http://www.chicagohistoryjournal.com/2010/06/guts-and-glory-last-great-aerial.html Guts and Glory: The Last Great Aerial Tournament], Chicago History Journal, Retrieved December 2, 2015[https://books.google.com/books?id=Q24aAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA362 The Chicago daily news almanac and year book for 1912], 362–63 (1911)
Organized by Cyrus McCormick Jr., thirty-two aviators attended, including Lincoln Beachey, Eugene Burton Ely, Thomas Sopwith, Glenn Curtiss, Thomas Scott Baldwin, René Simon, Earle Ovington, Harry Atwood, Claude Grahame-White, and Cal Rodgers.{{cite book |last1=Marrero |first1=Frank |title=Lincoln Beachey: The Man Who Owned the Sky |date=2017 |publisher=Tripod Press |location=Marin County, California |isbn=9780967326535 |pages=74-87}}
Lincoln Beachey set a world altitude record of 11,642 feet at the meet.Lynch, Christopher. [https://books.google.com/books?id=UwliyBi86vYC&pg=PA25 Chicago's Midway Airport: the first seventy-five years] (2002) ({{ISBN|978-1-893121-18-8}})
William R. Badger and St. Croix Johnstone[http://earlyaviators.com/ejohncroi.htm St. Croix Johnstone; EarlyAviators.com] Retrieved October 9, 2017 both died in aviation accidents at the meet.{{cite news |title=W.R. Badger Crushed by His Engine and St. Croix Johnstone Drowned at Chicago. |url=https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0B14F8355A17738DDDAF0994D0405B818DF1D3 |quote=Two airmen were killed here on this, the fourth day of the big aviation meet at Grant Park, after three days without a serious accident. The victims were William R. Badger, son of a wealthy Pittsburgh family, and St. Croix Johnstone of Chicago, both young men, and the double tragedy took place in the presence of 500,000 spectators.|work=The New York Times |date=August 16, 1911 |access-date=2010-11-07 }} The wings on Badger's biplane collapsed when he tried to pull out of dive too late, and Johnstone crashed into Lake Michigan after his engine failed.