The full-size airplanes were displayed well, and included machines from the
Wright brothers, Lovelace-Thompson,
Blériot,
Moisant,
Burgess Company and Curtiss (
Glenn Curtiss), New York's Waldon-Dyott Company
monoplane (
George Miller Dyott), C. & A. Wittemann (
Wittemann brothers) of Staten Island, a
Santos-Dumont Demoiselle airplane imported from France, and "A dozen other machines of types, not as well-known, several of them of odd and novel construction".
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported, "All the evening a crowd gathered around the various types of aeroplanes. The machine that came in for the biggest amount of attention was that with which Johnny Moisant crossed the
English Channel. When the news became known that Moisant had been killed at New Orleans, the machine was immediately draped in the colors of mourning." The Burgess Company and Curtiss airplane also drew much attention from the crowd, as it was a 1910 "new model built for
Claude Grahame-White, the English winner of the Coupe Internationale d'Aviation ...", General
Frederick Dent Grant discussed the airplane safety issues, and the tragic airplane deaths of
Moisant and
Archibald Hoxsey with Captain T. T. Lovelace the director of the First Industrial Airplane Show, and with Wright brothers' representative
J. Clifford Turpin, according to the
New York Times According to the
New York Times report, General Grant was pleased with the "comprehensiveness" of the airplane show. The
United States Aeronautical Reserve had an exhibition booth with interesting airplane displays and a demonstration on January 5, 1911 of early wireless communication technology utilizing the "Wilcox aeroplane equipped with [Harry M. Horton|Horton] wireless apparatus" used to communicate from the airplane to the land-based news media and to test distance with steamships out at sea. The Aeronautical Society and the United States Aeronautical Reserve had their full-size airplane displays in the second gallery among other full-size airplanes.
: Charles W. Chappelle, a member of the
: United States Aeronautical Reserve, exhibited a full-size airplane which won him a medal for being the only African-American to invent and display an airplane. His airplane design attracted attention and investors. After the
industrial show, Chappelle's airplane was displayed at the headquarters of the United States Aeronautical Reserve, 53 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Later that year Chappelle helped in the startup founding of the first African-American airplane company, of which he was a vice-president. ==References==