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      Sopwith
      
      The Sopwith Aviation Company was a British 
      aircraft company that designed and manufactured aeroplanes mainly for the 
      British Royal Flying Corps, Royal Naval Air Service and later Royal Air 
      Force in the First World War, most famously the Sopwith Camel. Sopwith 
      aircraft were also used in varying numbers by the French, Belgian and 
      American air services during the War. 
       
      The company was founded in Kingston-upon-Thames by Thomas Octave Murdoch 
      (Tommy, later Sir Thomas) Sopwith, a well-to-do gentleman sportsman 
      interested in aviation, yachting and motor-racing, in June of 1912. The 
      company's first factory premises opened that December in a disused ice 
      rink. During the First World War, the company made more than 16,000 
      aircraft and employed 5,000 people. Many more of the company's aircraft 
      were made by subcontractors than by Sopwith's themselves. These included 
      Fairey, Clayton & Shuttleworth, William Beardmore and Company and Ruston 
      Proctor. The Sopwith company was wound up in 1920 after failing to achieve 
      sufficient success with civilian products (which had prompted the purchase 
      of ABC Motors in 1919) to compensate for the drop in military aircraft 
      orders after the end of the War and a potential large demand from the 
      government for Excess War Profits Duty. 
       
      Initially, Tom Sopwith himself, assisted by his former personal mechanic 
      Fred Sigrist, led the design of the company's types. Following a number of 
      unremarkable pre-war designs for the Royal Naval Air Service, such as the 
      Three-Seater and Bat-Boat, Sopwith's first major success was the fast and 
      compact (hence the name) Tabloid, a design which first showed the 
      influence of the company's test pilot, the Australian Harry Hawker. A 
      float-equipped version of this aircraft won the Schneider Trophy in 1914. 
      The landplane version used by both the RNAS and RFC at the start of the 
      war. With higher power and floats, the type evolved into the Sopwith Baby, 
      which was a workhorse of the RNAS for much of World War One. 
       
      In 1916, Herbert Smith became Chief Engineer of the Sopwith company, and 
      under his design leadership its other successful World War I types 
      included the larger Type 9901. This aircraft, better known as the 1 1/2 
      Strutter due to its unconventional cabane strut arrangement, was used from 
      1916 by both the RNAS, RFC and the French Aviation Militaire as a 
      single-seat bomber, two seat fighter and artillery spotter and trainer. 
      Soon after came the small and agile single-seat Scout, which quickly 
      became better known as the Pup because of its obvious descent from the 1 
      1/2 Strutter. The Pup and 1 1/2 Strutter were the first successful British 
      tractor fighters equipped with a synchronising gear to allow a machine gun 
      to fire through the rotating propeller. This gear was known as the 
      Sopwith-Kauper gear from its designers, although several other designs 
      were used later. The Pup was widely used on the Western Front by the RFC 
      and from ships by the RNAS from the autumn of 1916 to the early summer of 
      1917, and was considered a delight to fly by its pilots. It continued in 
      use as an advanced trainer for the remainder of the War. 
       
      Experimentally equipped with three narrow-chord wings and a more powerful 
      engine, the Pup led to the Triplane, which was used only in small 
      quantities in the spring of 1917, but became well-known for its startling 
      fighting qualities, put to best use by Raymond Collishaw's famous 'Black 
      Flight' of 'Naval 10' (10 Squadron, RNAS). This flight was so called due 
      to the black identification colour of the flight's aircraft, which in turn 
      led to their naming as Black Maria, Black Prince, Black Death, Black Roger 
      and, rather lamely, Black Sheep. Such was the impact of this type that it 
      spawned a large number of experimental triplane designs from manufacturers 
      on all sides, although only the Fokker Triplane achieved any subsequent 
      success. 
       
      In the early summer of 1917 the twin-gun Camel fighter was introduced. 
      This aircraft was highly manoeuvrable and well-armed, and over 5,000 were 
      produced up until the end of the War. It destroyed more enemy aircraft 
      than any other British type, but its difficult flying qualities also 
      killed very many novice pilots in accidents. It was used, modified, as 
      both a night-fighter and shipboard aircraft, and was flown in combat by 
      the Belgian and American Air Services as well as the British. 
       
      Later still in front-line service came the stationary-engined four-gun 
      Dolphin and the ultimate rotary-engined fighter, the Snipe. The Snipe saw 
      little wartime service, being issued only in small numbers to the Front, 
      but William George Barker, the Canadian Ace, won a Victoria Cross flying 
      one in an epic single-handed dogfight against enormous odds. 
       
      Towards the end of the war the company produced the Cuckoo torpedo-bomber 
      and the Salamander armoured ground-attack development of the Snipe, but 
      these types were too late to see action. Many other experimental 
      prototypes were produced throughout the war, mostly named after animals 
      (Hippo, Gnu etc), leading to some referring to the 'Sopwith Zoo'. 
       
      Following World War One, the Sopwith Snipe was chosen as the standard 
      fighter of the much-reduced Royal Air Force, and soldiered on until 
      finally replaced in the late 1920s. 
       
      Sopwith attempted to produce aircraft for the civil market based on their 
      wartime types, such as the Dove derivative of the Pup and the Swallow, a 
      single-winged Camel, but the wide availability of war-surplus aircraft at 
      knock-down prices meant this was never economic. 
       
      Upon the liquidation of the Sopwith company, Tom Sopwith himself, together 
      with Harry Hawker, Fred Sigrist and Bill Eyre, immediately formed H.G. 
      Hawker Engineering, forerunner of the Hawker-Siddeley Aviation company. 
      Sopwith was Chairman of Hawker-Siddeley until his retirement. Hawker and 
      its successors produced many more famous military aircraft, including the 
      inter-war Hart, Demon, World War 2 Hurricane , Typhoon, Tempest, and the 
      post-war Sea Fury, Hunter and Harrier. Incredibly, these later jet types 
      were manufactured in the exact same factory buildings used to produce 
      Sopwith Snipes in 1918. 
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