Sopwith became interested in flying after seeing
John Moisant flying the first cross-
Channel passenger flight. His first flight was with
Gustave Blondeau in a
Farman at
Brooklands. He soon taught himself to fly on a
Howard Wright Avis monoplane and took to the air on his own for the first time on 22 October 1910. He crashed after travelling about 300 yards (275 m), but soon improved, and on 22 November was awarded
Royal Aero Club Aviation Certificate No. 31, flying a
Howard Wright 1910 Biplane. On 18 December 1910, Sopwith won the £4000
Baron de Forest Prize for the longest flight from England to the Continent in a British-built aeroplane, flying 169 miles (272 km) in 3 hours 40 minutes. He used the winnings to set up the Sopwith School of Flying at Brooklands. On 28 June 1911, as the
RMS Olympic was leaving
New York City on her eastbound maiden voyage, Sopwith flew up to the Olympic, intending to drop a package of last minute supplies destined for passenger
Washington Atlee Burpee. However, the package narrowly missed the deck, falling into the Hudson River. In June 1912, Sopwith, along with Fred Sigrist and others, set up the
Sopwith Aviation Company, initially at Brooklands. On 24 October 1912 using a
Wright Model B completely rebuilt by Sopwith and fitted with an
ABC 40 hp engine,
Harry Hawker took the British Michelin Endurance prize with a flight of 8h 23m. Sopwith Aviation got its first military aircraft order in November 1912, and in December moved to larger premises in Canbury Park Road,
Kingston upon Thames. The site of the factory is now a private gated housing estate. A small section of the original building still exists at the junction of Elm Crescent and Canbury Park Road; white painted bay windows can be seen extending from the building to allow as much light as possible to enter the large room in which Sopwith made blueprints for his aircraft designs. The company produced more than 18,000
World War I aircraft for the allied forces, including 5747 of the
Sopwith Camel single-seat fighter. Sopwith was awarded the
CBE in 1918. Bankrupted after the war by punitive anti-profiteering taxes and a failed venture into motorcycle manufacturing, he re-entered the aviation business in 1920 with a new firm named after his chief engineer and test pilot, Harry Hawker. Sopwith became chairman of the new firm,
Hawker Aircraft. He became a
Knight Bachelor in 1953. After the nationalisation in 1977 of the aviation interests of what was by then
Hawker Siddeley, he continued to work as a consultant to the company until 1980. In 1979, Sopwith was inducted into the
International Air & Space Hall of Fame at the
San Diego Air & Space Museum. He was a member of the
Air Squadron flying club. ==Yachting==