📜 120 years of pilots
From the Wright brothers to autonomous flight
A century since humans first floated 12 seconds above sand. From mail couriers to airline captains, from captains to supervisors of autonomous systems. Authority, trust, survival rate — all changed at least three times.
🪶 Pre-history — From Icarus to Da Vinci (BCE → 1900)
Flight is one of humanity's oldest dreams. It just had never been a profession.
The Icarus myth
8th century BCE. Wings of feather and wax. Don't fly too close to the sun — already then, flight was "the act of testing limits."
Leonardo da Vinci
~1485. Sketches of the ornithopter, parachute, and helicopter — all on paper. He dissected birds' wings but couldn't find an engine.
Otto Lilienthal
1848–1896. Germany. 2,000 glider flights — killed on his last. The Wright brothers read his book before they began.
✈️ 1903 → 1939 — Pioneers (12 seconds to the Atlantic)
Thirty-six years from a bicycle shop to a real profession. The first pilots flew mail and died often.
| Year | Event | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1903 | Wright Flyer, 12 seconds at Kitty Hawk | First proof of powered flight. The fourth attempt that day lasted 59 seconds. |
| 1918 | U.S. Postal Air Mail begins | First commercial pilot job — 31 of the first 40 mail pilots died in service (40% mortality). |
| 1927 | Lindbergh, solo nonstop transatlantic | Flight became transit, not stunt. 33h 30min, no sleep. |
| 1936 | DC-3 enters service | First aircraft to make money carrying passengers without subsidy — birth of the airline industry. |
| 1939 | First jet flight (He 178) | The propeller's twilight begins. |
🚀 1940 → 1978 — The jet age and the captain's golden era
The thirty postwar years are the peak of the profession. "Pan Am captain" was a social rank in itself.
B-17 / Spitfire (1939–1945)
WWII trained pilots in volume — 350K U.S., 130K UK. After the war these became the first captains of civil aviation.
Boeing 707 (1958)
Atlantic in 6 hours. The captain — gold stripes, peaked cap, applauded in the cabin. A captain's salary surpassed a surgeon's.
747 jumbo (1969)
Four hundred at a time. But automation begins — the navigator and flight engineer slowly disappear.
"In 1965, the average senior captain at a U.S. major earned $40,000 — the same year, an average surgeon earned $35,000. The gap never widened that far again."
🛬 From Tenerife 1977 to CRM — the end of captain authority
March 27, 1977. 583 dead. Two Boeing 747s on the runway. The first officer told the captain "I don't think we have takeoff clearance" — and the captain ignored him. The day aviation changed forever.
Crew Resource Management (1981 → )
"Captain is absolute" model abolished. Every crew member has a duty to voice safety concerns immediately. Standard training at every major airline today.
1978 Airline Deregulation Act
U.S. ends route, fare, and entry regulation. Low-cost carriers emerge → wage pressure downward. Pan Am bankrupt 1991.
1988 A320 — fly-by-wire
Captain doesn't "pull the yoke" anymore — the captain "tells the computer the intent." Flight becomes a keyboard task.
🎯 Where pilots stand today
2024 U.S., approximately 160,000 ATPL holders (BLS·FAA). Post-pandemic shortage, autonomous-flight pressure, and the first single-pilot operations debate.
The Wright brothers in 1903 pulled every rope themselves. The 1965 captain commanded a first officer, a navigator, and a flight engineer. The 1988 A320 captain negotiated with the computer. The 2025 captain supervises the system, and grabs the stick only when the system gives up — flying 1,500 hours to be ready for that one second.
⚖️ Dilemmas that don't disappear
Nothing is new. Just faster, more automated.
1. Authority vs. collaboration
After Tenerife the captain is no longer absolute. But when a decision must be made in half a second, whose voice arrives first? The eternal balance problem of CRM.
2. Automation vs. manual skill
2009 AF447, 2013 Asiana 214, 2018 Lion Air MAX — failed automation + lost manual skill, common factor. The less you fly, the less you can fly.
3. Safety vs. on-time
"On-time departure" bonuses create unsafe pushes. FAA's voluntary reporting (ASAP) helps but corporate pressure is hard to capture in a report.
4. Human vs. system
Autonomy makes 99% of routine flights safer. But on the 1% abnormal, who decides if not a human? (Continued in AI & the future.)
5. One captain vs. a cabin of many
The fate of 208 hangs on one person's last second. How do you price that weight? (Continued in What is a pilot.)
📚 Go deeper
Four sub-pages — gift, vision, path, history.