Terry Sweeney (hang glider)
Terry Sweeney | |
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Born | Terry Sweeney December 6, 1947 Grasmere, New Hampshire, U.S. |
Known for |
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Spouse | Lisa Lapin |
Relatives | Patsy Sweeney (great uncle) |
Terry Sweeney (born December 6, 1947) is an American inventor and hang glider pioneer. He designed hang gliders and equipment for Sky Sports and was a founding member and leader of many musical groups including Sweeney's Glider, Fly by Day, and Tam and the Bourines.
Early life
[edit]Terry Sweeney was born in Grasmere, New Hampshire, on December 6, 1947, and raised in Dunbarton, New Hampshire. He was the youngest of the four children of John Sweeney, a laborer, and Charlotte Sweeney, a waitress.[1] He was fascinated with flight from a very young age and began building balloons and gliders in his backyard as a teenager.
Sweeney's Glider
[edit]Sweeney and one of his first gliders, a homemade $40 biplane, were featured in Fritz Weatherby's 1971 classic hang gliding video, Sweeney's Glider.[2][3] In the video, Terry Sweeney describes the inspiration for his biplane, and Weatherby documents the efforts to get the glider off the ground. The video is accompanied throughout by music from Sweeney's band, Sweeney's Glider, singing about the dream of gliding flight.
Sky Sports
[edit]Sweeney designed hang gliders for Sky Sports, an East Coast hang glider manufacturer in the mid-1970s. While working for Sky Sports, along with other members of the Sky Sports design team, including designer Tom Peghiny and pilot Dennis Pagen, Sweeney contributed to the design of the Sirocco I, Sirocco II, Osprey, Merlin, and Kestrel. Sweeney was one of the first to incorporate double sail surfaces and an enclosed crossbar in his glider designs.[4] To improve pitch stability of these early Rogallo designs Sweeney added a strut under the sail of each wingtip, which were then attached to the top of the kingpost with a cable.[4] Together with David Aguilar he also helped design and develop the Sky Sports supine harness.[4] Sweeney was also an early pioneer in powered hang gliders. In 1977, he developed a twintube kingpost mount for attaching an engine to a Rogallo-type flex-wing glider; this proved to be quite a dangerous design in turbulent conditions.[5]
Hang gliding instructor
[edit]After teaching himself to fly various types of fixed-wing gliders in the late 1960s,[2] by the early 1970s, Sweeney was sharing his enthusiasm for the sport by teaching others. His beginner lessons in the "Clay Pit", an open field by a slope near his house in Dunbarton, New Hampshire, were well known throughout the East Coast by hang gliding aficionados.[6] The hill has become overgrown with trees and is now part of a popular motocross trail called Hang Glider Hill in the Hopkinton-Everett Multi-Use Trail System in Weare, New Hampshire.[7]
Awards and honors
[edit]- 1975 Champion, USHGA Eastern Regionals, Grandfather Mountain, North Carolina[8]
- 1975 6th place in First World Hang Gliding Championship in Kössen, Austria [9]
- 2003 Rogallo Hall of Fame Inductee[10]
Personal life
[edit]Terry Sweeney is married to Lisa Lapin. He is the great-nephew of the boxer Patsy Sweeney, the Manchester Whirlwind.
References
[edit]- ^ Hadley, Alice May Bunton (October 3, 2012). "Dunbarton Genealogical Notes" (PDF). Dunbarton Public Library. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ a b From "A" to "Yellowjack"; a film study collection (PDF). Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Audio Visual Center. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ Weatherby, Fritz (1971). Sweeney's Glider (motion picture). United States. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ a b c Cunion, Edward. "Flying Squad". Hang Glider History. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ Allen, Bill (August 1977). "Now they're hanging engines on hang gliders". Popular Mechanics: 62–64.
- ^ Winkleman, Mark (1 April 1974). "Hang gliding: Find a cliff, then jump". The New Yorker: 63.
- ^ United States Army Corps of Engineers (May 12, 2010). "Hopkinton-Everett Multi-use Trail System" (PDF). Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ Hilliard, Jack (May 14, 2009). ""For a few glorious moments..."". A View to Hugh. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ Cunion, Edward. "Hang gliding 1975, part 1". Hang Glider History. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
- ^ "Rogallo Hall of Fame". Kittyhawk Kits. 2024. Retrieved July 5, 2024.