Wright Brothers
Just over a century ago in June 1909, two famous Americans arrived in Brentwood. Their faces were familiar, having made front page headlines in world press. They were Wilbur and Orville Wright. Six years earlier they had made history by becoming the world’s first aviators. They were in London that summer, promoting their great achievement and no doubt paid a visit to Mary Green Manor in Brook Street, where their ancestors, the Wright family had lived centuries earlier.
Balloons Over EssexAlthough powered flight was a wonderful discovery, certain people had enjoyed seeing Brentwood from the air well before those Edwardian times. There’s the story of the dashing Duke of Brunswick, one of the nephews of George IV,
Cheap Flights to the Contient
At that time Britain’s flag carrier was Imperial Airways. Hillman competed to give a cheap ‘no-frills’ airbus service keeping costs to a minimum. Pilots and staff were employed on low wages. The first service began on 1 April, 1932,
Hillman’s Early DeathEdward Hillman is remembered as being a fascinating entrepreneur - hard-working, but hot-headed, whose name and reputation were, within a short time, catapulted to the forefront of the business world. However, Hillman sadly died at the age of 45 on 31 December 1934.
Darling Amy
Pilots have commented on the green spaces that surrounded the town before the developers got going after World War One. One young lady who undoubtedly enjoyed being at the flight control was Amy Johnson. At the age of 22 she’d made history by flying solo to Australia in a tiny Moth aeroplane. At one time, Amy worked for Edward Hillman who in 1931 developed his own air passenger service – flying from Maylands Aerodrome – that grass airstrip situated between Brentwood and Romford (now Maylands Golf & Country Club), situated on the western boundary of Brentwood. Hillman, a bus proprietor,