In 1910, he applied and was chosen to join the
Wright Flying School, run by
Wilbur Wright and
Orville Wright. After training, he joined the
Wright Exhibition Team. One of his first assignments was as a demonstration pilot for the Wright B Flyer at the Appalachian Exposition in
Knoxville, Tennessee. On November 7, 1910, Parmelee became the first pilot to transport commercial cargo. His flight took him from
Dayton, Ohio, carrying a package of 100 pounds of silk worth about
US$1,000 for the opening of a store. Parmelee's route took him from Dayton to
Columbus, Ohio by way of
South Charleston and
London, following the route of the old
National Road. Newspaper clippings quoted the Wright brothers as stating he covered the distance in 66 minutes, but the flight was officially recorded at 57 minutes, a world speed record at the time. Parmelee also traveled to Texas in the spring of 1911, where he flew the Wright Flyer with Lt.
Benjamin D. Foulois. The pair conducted the first military reconnaissance missions, flying along the border with Mexico during maneuvers held by the
U.S. Army as a show of force to
Mexican revolutionaries. The airplane was owned by neither the U.S. Army, whose aircraft was no longer reliable, nor the Wright brothers, but was rented from
Robert J. Collier, owner of ''
Collier's Weekly''. On their second flight, Foulois and Parmelee accidentally shut off the engine. At extremely low altitude over the
Rio Grande, Parmelee got the engine to restart, but at full throttle. The sudden thrust caused the plane to nose down into the water and flip over onto its top. Neither pilot was injured and the aircraft was salvaged and repaired. Later in 1911, Parmelee was the pilot of a Wright Model B when 54-year-old parachutist
Grant Morton jumped out over
Venice Beach,
California. This was the earliest known jump by a man from an airplane using a parachute. == Death ==