Sneha Girap (Editor)

Edward Purkis Frost

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
English

Known for
  
Aeronautic experiments


Name
  
Edward Frost

Died
  
1922

Edward Purkis Frost

Employer
  
Royal Aeronautical Society

Edward Purkis Frost (1842 – 1922) was an English pioneer of aviation. He built ornithopters, and became president of the Aeronautical Society.

E.P. Frost lived at West Wratting Hall in Cambridgeshire and became a Justice of the Peace.

Frost began studying flight in 1868 and built a large steam-powered flying machine with both fixed and flapping wings from 1870 to 1877. Frost had intended to have a 20-25 hp steam engine but the actual engine with 5 hp was not powerful enough to lift the ornithopter from the ground. The experiment cost Frost £1000. In collaboration with several colleagues he started another large similar craft in 1902 with an internal combustion engine. It lifted from the ground in 1904. A wing from this craft is displayed in London's Science Museum.

Frost had been a member of the Aeronautical Society since 1875 and became its president from 1908 to 1911.

References

Edward Purkis Frost Wikipedia