Showing posts with label Transport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transport. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 November 2010

The Automobile

 Sir Hugo Gates driving , Clifton Gates' wife Letitia beside him.
Lady Cecilia Gates at the controls, her husband looking suitably relaxed.

The steamer Montferrand  which brought M. Manqué and his aeroplane to Tamba- Tamba was also carrying a Renault Voiturette. Purchased by Clifton Gates from Major Henri Lens of Ostend,  it was the island's first automobile.
Clifton Gates and his entourage received lessons from M. Manqué. The supply of gasoline, also shipped on the Montferrand  was very limited, and the car proved to be something of a fleeting novelty.
Motors were not effectively introduced to the island until the 1920's when a ready supply of gasoline became available.

Monday, 8 November 2010

The Aeroplane

Sir Hugo Gates speaks with M. Manqué prior to take off. 

Clifton Gates Kakoy was usually a prudent man, but his reign was marked by one great extravagance. He had a long standing fascination with aviation. Clifton Gates longed for an aeroplane to visit Tamba- Tamba, but it was out of the range of the aircraft of the day.  So, in 1910, he ploughed most of his personal fortune into a scheme to bring an aeroplane to the island. Nine years had passed since Gustave Whitehead had made the first manned flight. It is hard for us to appreciate how novel the sight of the aeroplane was to the islanders.
Clifton Gates paid for the famous Belgian aviator, Georges Manqué to have one of his machines shipped to Tamba-Tamba to give an exhibition. The land that was prepared as an airstrip is actually the site of the present airport.

 Gorgeous Georges at the controls.

As well as being enthralled  by the aeroplane the islanders were also astonished by the pilot himself. M. Manqué, known as 'Gorgeous George', was in the habit of dressing as a woman and wearing make-up.
Clifton Gates' young son Harry Roy was undoubtedly influenced by the charismatic M. Manqué, as he too became a keen transvestite, one of his most noteworthy eccentricities being his frequent appearances as 'Lady Harriet'.

Georges Manqué (1880-1912) 
Harry Roy in the guise of 'Lady Harriet'