Hangar Hanger?
Posted: Sat May 15, 2021 9:20 am
Early in my flying-career an employer told me that airplanes used to be “hung” by their tails from rolling casters suspended from the ceiling of storage bldgs...and that was why they were called “hangars”. I don’t think he was joking because I’d seen photographs of early light aircraft so stored.
However recently while reading, I came across the word “hanger” being used to describe the edifice and realized the similarity in pronounciation leads many to misspell the word. This caused me to research it online and that resulted in the discovery of the Wikipedia explanation that “hanghart” was a French word meaning “an enclosure near a house”.
The story also arises in early aviaiton that Louis Bleriot crash-landed and gained permission from a farmer to story his aeroplane in the farmers cattle-shed/hanghart.... and so the term was adopted.
The British simply revolt at most things French and called them “sheds”... but, I’m guessing since many early aviation developments had French origins that “hangar” became the accepted term, along with “aileron”, “Pitot”,“empennage” and “fuselage”.
I suppose I must chandelle out of this post now.
Au revoir and Adeiu.
However recently while reading, I came across the word “hanger” being used to describe the edifice and realized the similarity in pronounciation leads many to misspell the word. This caused me to research it online and that resulted in the discovery of the Wikipedia explanation that “hanghart” was a French word meaning “an enclosure near a house”.
The story also arises in early aviaiton that Louis Bleriot crash-landed and gained permission from a farmer to story his aeroplane in the farmers cattle-shed/hanghart.... and so the term was adopted.
The British simply revolt at most things French and called them “sheds”... but, I’m guessing since many early aviation developments had French origins that “hangar” became the accepted term, along with “aileron”, “Pitot”,“empennage” and “fuselage”.
I suppose I must chandelle out of this post now.
Au revoir and Adeiu.