Moore-Brabazon first flew solo in November 1908 in France in a
Voisin biplane. He became the first resident Englishman to make an officially recognised aeroplane flight in England on 2 May 1909, at Shellbeach on the
Isle of Sheppey with flights of 450 ft, 600 ft, and 1500 ft. On 4 May 1909, Moore-Brabazon was photographed outside the
Royal Aero Club clubhouse Mussell Manor (now Muswell Manor Holiday Park) alongside the
Wright Brothers, the
Short Brothers,
Charles Rolls, and many other early aviation pioneers. In 1909 he sold the
Bird of Passage to
Arthur Edward George, who learned to fly in it at the Royal Aero Club's flying-ground at Shellbeach and bought a
Short Brothers-built Wright biplane. A documentary,
A Dream of Flight, was made in 2009 to celebrate the centenary of his achievement on the Isle of Sheppey. , John Moore-Brabazon put a small
pig in a waste-paper basket tied to a wing strut of his
Voisin aeroplane. On 30 October 1909, flying the
Short Biplane No. 2, he flew a circular mile and won a
£1,000 prize offered by the
Daily Mail newspaper. On 4 November 1909, as a joke to prove that
pigs could fly, he put a small pig in a waste-paper basket tied to a wing strut of his aeroplane. This may have been the first live cargo flight by aeroplane. With Charles Rolls, he would later make the first ascent in a spherical
gas balloon of English manufacture (by the Short brothers). On 8 March 1910, Moore-Brabazon became the first person to qualify as a pilot in the United Kingdom and was awarded
Royal Aero Club Aviator's Certificate number 1; his car also bore the number plate FLY 1. However, only four months later, his friend
Charles Rolls was killed in a flying accident and Moore-Brabazon's wife persuaded him to give up flying. ==First World War==