Arthur Burr Stone was born in 1874. On 17 August 1911 at an aviation meet in
Chicago, Stone's plane crashed into
Lake Michigan from a height of 1,000 feet. Stone leapt from the plane before impact. By his own account: "I held my hand over my face and stood up in the cock pit," as he jumped. He spent half an hour in the water before being rescued. Stone was in
Hamilton on May 12, then on 4 June the monoplane was "written off by a fence on the boundary of
Napier's racecourse." Stone was earmarked to carry the first Government official airmail from
Melbourne to
Sydney on 23 May 1914. Five days before the scheduled flight, the American
barnstormer, while test flying his Metz-Bleriot at
Sunshine, Victoria, suffered a mishap and damaged the plane. The flight was cancelled and the mail was carried to Sydney by rail. He died in 1943. ==Anecdotes==