University of Pennsylvania
Penn's First Intercollgiate Champion
At the first meet of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association in
1876, a Penn junior named Hugh deLaussett Willoughby C1877
won the running broad jump, as it was then called, by leaping 18
feet 3 1/2 inches through the air. Not much of a jump by
today?s standards, maybe, but good enough to win that day in
Saratoga, and thus make Willoughby Penn?s first
intercollegiate champion.

Willoughby blazed some other trails at Penn, where he studied
mining and geological engineering. He was the first
student-athlete to wear a Red and Blue letter, and he was a
member of Penn?s first football team in 1876 (its record was
1-2).

He would later claim that as a 14-year-old boy in 1870, he had
brought the first bicycle and the first dry-plate photography
apparatus back from France (where he was visiting with his
family) to the United States. While the claims to primacy are
debatable?the records show that someone had applied for a
bicycle patent in the U.S. in 1866?he was clearly ahead of his
time at a young age. And he would become a pioneer of motion:
in the air, on land, and by sea.

According to Who?s Who in American Aeronautics,
Willoughby?s love affair with the air dates from 1894, when he
began making airplane models inspired by photographs of
soaring birds. After taking photographs of the Paris Exhibition
in 1900 from the vantage point of a balloon, he took what are
believed to be the first aerial photographs of Philadelphia in
1908.

That same year he is said to have assisted Orville Wright with
one of his Army demonstration flights at Fort Myer, Virginia,
near Washington. Just how he assisted is not clear, though. In a
letter to Willoughby written on December 26, 1908, Wright
wrote: ?The planes of the machine I used at Washington were
not flat, as you seem to think, but curved downward at the
ends.? In another letter, Wright concluded that he and his
brother ?shall be very glad if you find it possible to run down to
see us? in Washington the following spring.

Whatever the extent of their professional relationship,
Willoughby was certainly in on the ground floor of the flying
revolution, and the Wright brothers made use of some of his
technical innovations. In 1909 he designed and built a large
bi-plane called the War Hawk, and by 1911 he was touting his
latest invention, a ?hydro-aeroplane? named Pelican. (?The
sport of hydro-aeroplaning,? Willoughby told a newspaper in
October 1911, ?will supplant the racing motor boat among the
men who want to drive fast and get a thrill that is a combination
of fast motor boating and aeroplaning and the best part of the
hydro aeroplane is that it is absolutely safe.?) He would end up
holding more than a dozen patents for his aerial inventions, and
for years he was listed as the oldest licensed airplane pilot in the
country.

Willoughby liked fast cars, too. In 1903 he set a record by
driving an automobile from Philadelphia to Newport, Rhode
Island, in 20 1/4 hours, which included four flat tires and a
ferry ride from Long Island to New London, Connecticut. Nine
years later he established another record by driving his
Hupmobile from Newport to Jacksonville, Florida, in 19 days,
despite some ?execrable? roads in southern Georgia and
northern Florida.

Willoughby also had a thing for water, even in his Penn days,
when he was a member of the College Barge Club. Two decades
later, he organized and commanded the Naval Reserve of
Rhode Island, then enrolled in the Naval War College,
graduating in 1896. He worked with the Navy in developing its
early submarines, and his speedboat, Seminole, was said to be
the first in the U.S.

He first saw South Florida on a fishing trip shortly after
graduating from Penn, and would spend much of his life
there?first on his houseboat, Manatee, and later in the house he
built at Sewall?s Point. In 1897 he and a guide spent 15 days
canoeing through the Everglades, from the Harney River to
Miami. In his book, Across the Everglades, he effectively
disproved the notion that the Everglades was a swamp, noting
that ?pure water is running in it, and no stagnant pool can be
found.?

By the time he died in 1939 at the age of 82, newspaper editors
had trouble summing up his life in a short headline. ?Pioneer in
Aviation Was one of Penn?s first Great Athletes,? wrote one. A
chapter in a book on Southeast Florida Pioneers may have put
it best. ?Hugh deLaussett Willoughby,? it was titled. ?Farther,
Faster, Higher.??S.H.

Much of the research for this piece was provided by George H.
Stewart W?53?who, along with his wife, Betsy Bratton Stewart
DH?52, and fellow alumni James F. Conway W?49, John
Deuchler W?50 WG?51, Nancy McFadden Schroth NTS?57,
and Walter Schroth W?58, live in the Willoughby Golf Club
Community in Stuart, Florida, where Jack Mitchell W?46 is a
?valued member of our golf staff.?


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