The
British and Colonial Aeroplane Company, Ltd., commonly known as Bristol, was a large, well-financed company run by businessman
Sir George White, chairman of the
Bristol Tramways Company. It was a great contrast to the small, enthusiast-run outfits that comprised most of his competitors. In 1910 they had set up flying schools at Brooklands and at
Larkhill, near
Stonehenge in
Wiltshire, the latter leased from the
War Office along with flying rights over of
Salisbury Plain. Initially three iron sheds were erected. Pixton started at Bristol’s Brookands school, instructing pupils flying their
Boxkite (Farman-type) biplanes. He gained a great reputation for his skill in flying in high winds that left everyone else grounded Bristol used this in adverts even though he had only been with them for a few weeks. Pixton was entered for “The Great Race” or “
Daily Mail Circuit of Britain air race’’, an anti-clockwise tour of England and Scotland running from 22 July to 5 August 1911, starting and ending at Brooklands, and with a prize of £10,000, and prizes for several accomplishments en route, such as fastest to
Newcastle and first to land at
Trafford Park. Huge publicity and newspaper coverage attended the event, and crowds at the landing grounds were vast. Thirty pilots were registered, but only twenty-one actually started. On the second racing day, the leg from
Hendon to
Harrogate, a fuel leak caused Pixton, flying his Boxkite named ‘’Bumble Bee’’, to attempt a forced landing at
Spofforth cricket ground, four miles short of Harrogate. He stalled on the approach, narrowly missing the
cricket pavilion, but crashed into the grass. Luckily his legs, though trapped, were not crushed, but a spar was pushed two inches into his thigh. He pulled it out, later needing two stitches. He also had a cut to his hand and a few bruises. It was his worst ever crash, and the aircraft was destroyed. on
Salisbury Plain Pixton carried on at Brooklands flying passengers, demonstrating and instructing, but on 31 August 1911 Bristol moved him to Larkhill as an instructor and test pilot. The training was of civilians and army pilots from the nearby army bases on Boxkites. Having made his career and many friends at Brooklands, he was very reluctant to go, but he found that he enjoyed the comparative peace and quiet of the area, and the flying conditions were favourable. He was able to carry on competing for the Manville Prize (£500) for the most hours flying at Brooklands with passengers during the year. He flew there from Larkhill to compete. By the end of 1911 he had won the contest, bringing his prize money for the year to over £900 – more than anyone else flying in Britain. His achievement was celebrated by an advert in Aeroplane by the
E.N.V. Motor Syndicate whose engine powered the Boxkites. In 1912 Bristol started an overseas sales drive, and Pixton was the pilot chosen to make some of the trips. He started at the 3rd International Paris Aero Salon with the new
Bristol Prier monoplane being the only British aircraft on display, with another Bristol Prier giving flying displays at the airfield. The Bristol team then proceeded by train to
Cuatro Vientos,
Madrid where he flew a Bristol Prier, with another Bristol pilot flying a Boxkite, in front of the king,
Alfonso XIII. Bristol arranged to set up a flying school and to equip it with Priers and Boxkites. By March they had travelled on to
Döberitz Military Ground,
Berlin, with a Prier. Impressing the German military, orders were placed and an agreement made to produce Bristol aircraft under licence. In April 1912 Pixton was asked to test the
Bristol-Burney X.2 hydroplane which had been built at Filton with great secrecy. In
Milford Haven testing took place over three weeks, but with little success, and Pixton endured many drenchings in the process. Soon after this Pixton returned to Germany, this time to visit the new
Deutsche Bristol Werke company at
Halberstadt, which was starting to produce the Boxkites and Prier aircraft under the licence agreed during his first visit. He was to form a flying school, and to teach six German officers, after which he returned to Larkhill. Pixton took part in the
Military Aircraft Trials at Larkhill in August 1912. Preparations were extensive and flying school activities were temporarily transferred to Brooklands. Thirty different aircraft types had been prepared to try to meet the War Office specifications, twenty of them actually arriving for the contest. Pixton started the trials flying a
Bristol England biplane, but mid-way through the trials the Englands were withdrawn and he replaced James Valentine as pilot of a new
Bristol Coanda monoplane for the remainder of the tests. Pixton and two others came joint 3rd, behind the winner, Cody, but no aircraft was deemed suitable for adoption by the military. With the relative success of the Bristol Coanda,
Romania was interested in the aircraft, so Pixton went there in October 1912 to demonstrate a tandem-seat version, accompanied by the designer,
Henri Coandă, whose father was the war minister. Landing after one demonstration flight, Pixton ran into what he thought was a damp patch on
Bucharest’s Cotroceni Aerodrome. The patch but was actually a pond and his aircraft overturned. He and his passenger survived unharmed and the aircraft was undamaged but moist and muddy, but was soon ready to fly again. He spent a month flying in Romania, and an order for ten was placed for the government. Soon he went to Italy with a team of Bristol people and accompanied by his new wife (see Personal life below) where Pixton did a demonstration tour with Bristol aircraft, especially the Coanda, and the Italian government placed an order for a total of around 60 aircraft, some of which were to be built under licence by
Caproni. In January 1913 he made another trip to Spain to demonstrate the Bristol Coanda to King Alfonso, whom Pixton flew as a passenger. Again orders were placed for the aircraft. Pixton and the rest of the Larkhill team had to move to Brooklands in October 1913 as the army wanted to take over the airfield for artillery ranges by March 1914. Pixton found working for Bristol to be very agreeable. The company was generous, paying him £350 a year plus a third of prize money, and concerned for the well-being of its pilots. However in November 1913 he had an argument with Coandă about the balance of the new biplane he was going to fly, and refused to fly the aircraft until the problem was remedied. Coanda refused to make any changes, so Pixton resigned and joined the
Sopwith Aviation Company. ==Sopwith==