Biography & Autobiography Aviation & Nautical
Casey
The Remarkable, Untold Story of Frederick Walker "Casey" Baldwin: Gentleman, Genius, and Alexander Graham Bell's Protégé
- Publisher
- Nimbus Publishing
- Initial publish date
- Aug 2019
- Category
- Aviation & Nautical, Post-Confederation (1867-), 20th Century, General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781771088039
- Publish Date
- Aug 2019
- List Price
- $24.95
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Description
Frederick Walker "Casey" Baldwin—athlete, engineer, aeronaut, sailor, politician, activist, conservationist—was a true gentleman, modest to a fault. As one of Alexander Graham Bell's young associates, Casey was the first Canadian, and the first born in the British Empire, to fly—a full eleven months before the historic 1909 flight in Baddeck of the Silver Dart. Casey became the son Alec and Mabel Bell never had. Dr. Bell described him as "quite a genius...the best blood of Canada."
Gleaned from hundreds of pieces of heretofore unseen Baldwin correspondence, Casey is the untold story of true genius, epic accomplishments, and the stunning failure by Canada to seize upon and recognize those achievements. With this biography, Langley gives honour where honour is due.
Includes over 30 black and white images and a foreword by Casey's grandson, Sean Baldwin.
About the authors
John G. Langley is the author of Canadian Confederate Cruiser and Steam Lion. After a successful career in law, he retired from active practice, and, with a lengthy background as a collector and student of marine history, established the Cunard Steamship Society. He has been a consultant to producers of films on the life of Samuel Cunard and vessels of the Cunard Line. He lectures extensively aboard Cunard liners and other cruise ships. He lives in Baddeck, Nova Scotia.
Editorial Reviews
"Nonetheless, Langley's admiration for Baldwin—his gentility, his brilliance, his loyalty—is as palpable as his chagrin over the obscurity in which Baldwin languishes. While his passion occasionally gets the better of him, this lawyer turned biographer has to be admired for seeing an injustice and endeavouring to make it right." —Literary Review of Canada (Toronto, ON)