Henson & Stringfellow Lecture and Dinner The annual Henson & Stringfellow Lecture and Dinner is hosted yearly by the Yeovil Branch of the Royal Aeronautical Society, held at Westland Leisure Complex, and is a key social and networking event of the Yeovil lecture season. It is a black tie event attracting over 200 guests drawn from all sectors of the aerospace community.
John Stringfellow created, alongside
William Samuel Henson, the first
powered flight aircraft, developed in
Chard, Somerset, which flew unmanned in 1848, 63 years prior to brothers Wilbur & Orville Wrights' flight.
Wilbur & Orville Wright Named Lecture The Wilbur & Orville Wright Named Lecture was established in 1911 to honour the
Wright brothers, the successful and experienced mechanical engineers who completed the first successful controlled powered flight on 17 December 1903. The Wilbur & Orville Wright Lecture is the principal event in the Society’s year, given by distinguished members of the US and UK aerospace communities. The 99th Lecture was given by
Piers Sellers, astronaut, on 9 December 2010 at the Society's Headquarters in London. The 100th Lecture was given by
Suzanna Darcy-Henneman, Chief Pilot & Director of Training,
Boeing Commercial Airplanes, on 8 December 2011. The 101st Lecture was given by Tony Parasida, corporate vice president,
The Boeing Company, on 20 December 2012. The 102nd Lecture was given by
Thomas Enders, CEO of
EADS, on 12 December 2013. The 103rd Lecture was given by Patrick M Dewar, executive vice president,
Lockheed Martin International in December 2014. The 104th Lecture was given by Nigel Whitehead, Group Managing Director – Programmes and Support,
BAE Systems plc in December 2015. The 105th Lecture was given by ACM Sir Stephen Hillier, Chief of the Air Staff,
Royal Air Force on 6 December 2016. The 106th Lecture was given by Martin Rolfe, chief executive officer,
NATS on 5 December 2017. The 107th Lecture was given by
Leanne Caret, Vice President,
The Boeing Company and President & CEO,
Boeing Defense, Space & Security on 4 December 2018. The 108th Lecture was given by David Mackay FRAeS, Chief Pilot, Virgin Galactic on 10 December 2019.
Amy Johnson Named Lecture The Amy Johnson Named Lecture was inaugurated in 2011 by the Royal Aeronautical Society's Women in Aviation and Aerospace Committee to celebrate a century of women in flight and to honour Britain's most famous woman aviator. The Lecture is held on or close to 6 July every year to mark the date in 1929 when
Amy Johnson was awarded her
pilot’s licence. The Lecture is intended to tackle serious issues of interest to a wide audience, not just women. High-profile women from industry are asked to lecture on a topic that speaks of future challenges of interest to everyone.
Carolyn McCall, chief executive of
EasyJet, delivered the Inaugural Lecture on 6 July 2011 at the Society's Headquarters in London. The second Amy Johnson Named Lecture was delivered by
Marion C. Blakey, president and chief executive of
Aerospace Industries Association (AIA), on 5 July 2012. The third Lecture was delivered by Gretchen Haskins, former Group Director of the Safety Regulation Group of the UK
Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), on 8 July 2013. In 2017, Katherine Bennett OBE FRAeS, Senior Vice President Public Affairs,
Airbus gave the Amy Johnson Lecture and in 2018 Air Vice-Marshal
Sue Gray, CB, OBE from the
Royal Air Force gave the Amy Johnson Lecture in honour of the 100th anniversary of the RAF.
Sopwith Named Lecture The Sopwith Lecture was established in 1990 to honour Sir Thomas Sopwith CBE, Hon FRAeS. In the years prior to World War I, Sopwith became England’s premier aviator and established the first authoritative test pilot school in the world. He also founded England’s first major flight school. Between 1912 and 1920 Sopwith’s Company produced over 16,000 aircraft of 60 types. In 2017 the lecture was delivered by Tony Wood, chief operating officer of
Meggitt PLC. In 2018 the lecture was delivered by Group Captain Ian Townsend ADC MA RAF, Station Commander,
RAF Marham. In 2019 the lecture was delivered by Billie Flynn, F-35 Lightning II Test Pilot,
Lockheed Martin. In 2020 the lecture was delivered online by Dirk Hoke, CEO,
Airbus Defence & Space.
In popular culture The July 18th.,1975 edition of the society's Journal included the first use of the misattributed term, "
Beam Me Up, Scotty", in a sentence, viz:"...in a sort of, 'Beam me up, Scotty', routine". ==References==