Antonio Locatelli

Antonio Locatelli
Locatelli's 1918 Ansaldo A.1 Balilla aircraft, at the Museo storico di Bergamo

Antonio Locatelli (19 April 1895, Bergamo - 27 June 1936, Nekemte, Ethiopia) was a pioneering Italian aviator and National Fascist Party legislator. He served in Gabriele d'Annunzio's air squadron during the war against Austria and was decorated. After the war he became a deputy to Parliament. In 1924 he attempted a transatlantic flight but was forced down into the seas off Greenland, whence he was rescued. He was killed during the Italo-Ethiopian War.

Early life

Locatelli was the son of Samuel Locatelli and Anna Gelfi, a family of modest financial standing in Bergamo, Italy. From 1908 until his graduation in 1913, he attended the Bergamo Industrial Institute. He was a keen mountaineer in his youth, climbing the Adamello, Trentino, with his brother Carlo. He then became chief technician at the Ansaldo di Cornigliano Ligure.[1]

Aviator

Having joined a flying unit of the army, Locatelli was granted his pilot's licence in 1915. He went on to fly 523 sorties during World War I, starting out in reconnaissance and then flying fighters and bombers. He was particularly celebrated in performing solo reconnaissance over Zepellin yards in Friedrichshafen and flying over Vienna on 9 July 1918. He was subsequently downed and captured by the Germans, spending some time at Sigmundsherberg concentration camp. In recognition of his valour, he received gold and silver medals and was made a knight of the Military Order of Savoy.[1]

Attempted circumnavigation

Locatelli led Italy's attempt to achieve the first aerial circumnavigation during the 1924 scramble by six nations to achieve the feat. Flying a metal hulled Dornier Do J Wal flying boat, powered by two Rolls-Royce engines and with a crew of three (Lt. Tullio Crosio, copilot, Lts. Giovanni Branni and Bruno Farcinelli, engineers[2]:266,270), he left Pisa, Italy, on 25 July 1924, heading west. Locatelli's attempt came to an end on 21 August when heavy fog forced a landing 120 miles short of Greenland. Damage sustained to the plane's engine-carriers precluded resumption of the flight. Four days earlier, he had met up with the American team led by Lowell Smith, who were to be ultimately successful in setting the record, in Reykjavik, and had intended to accompany them on the circumnavigation.[2]:270[1][3] It was this chance meeting which ultimately saved their lives as the Americans raised the alarm when Locatelli failed to arrive in Greenland and the USS Richmond found them after a search by a flotilla of craft.[2]:278-81

Memorials

The following were dedicated to the memory of Antonio Locatelli:

References

  1. ^ a b c Crociani, Piero (2005). "Biographical Dictionary of Italians". Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  2. ^ a b c Thomas, Lowell (1925). The First World Flight. Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.
  3. ^ "The Locatelli Rescue". Historic Wings. Retrieved 19 May 2019.



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