Wednesday, September 30, 2020

New Layton, Utah History book now available



There's a new Layton, Utah history book, that premiered on October 26, 2020, from Arcadia Publishing in its "Images of America" line.

The book is written by Lynn Arave, also author of this Mystery of Utah History blog.

With more than 170 photographs, this book would make a great gift for any new or long-time Layton resident, or someone who grew up in Layton City.

(There's also a new history blog to accompany this book at: https://laytonutahhistory.blogspot.com/)

--NOTE that the book was delayed by the publisher for 5 months, from May to October 2020, because of the Coroniavirus.

-IF you would like a copy of the new history book on Layton, Utah, you can order it from a variety of sources for $21.99, or less:

--on Amazon


https://www.amazon.com/s?k=9781467104968&i=stripbooks&linkCode=qs


--Or from Barnes and Noble at:

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/layton-lynn-arave/1135498880;jsessionid=BBCAF0636AA08D36361AFE15AF583EBC.prodny_store01-atgap01?ean=9781467104968


--Or from the publisher, Arcadia at:

https://www.arcadiapublishing.com/Products/9781467104968

IF you can't decide if you'd like to purchase a copy of the book, a free 31 page preview of the 127-page book is available from Google at:

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Layton/m0PZDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=%22lynn+Arave%22&printsec=frontcover

Thursday, September 3, 2020

An actual Howard Stark -- Not the fictional father of 'Iron Man' Tony Stark -- And the real one crashed his airplane in Utah

                                        The Monte Cristo Mountains, far background.  


THERE actually existed a real Howard Stark who was both a legendary pilot and an inventor -- and he died in the aftermath of a plane crash in northern Utah.
Mention Howard Stark to anyone today and they may instantly think of the fictional Howard Stark from the Marvel comics and movie universe, who was the late father of "Iron Man," alias Tony Stark.
A June 16, 1936 headline in the Salt Lake Tribune: "Search party follows lost U.S. flier's trail for five miles. Major Stark wandered down Lost Creek from plane after crack-up last January."
My gosh, there was a real Howard Stark who flew airplanes in their early decades!
Stark flew U.S. mail in airplanes. He was flying from Rock Springs, Wyoming to Salt Lake City on January 16, 1936, when all radio contact was lost. A winter storm apparently forced him to land on a remote Utah peak, Observatory Peak, 28 miles northeast of Devil's Slide and east of Huntsville, Utah, in a blizzard. His plane was not discovered until 5 months later, in June of 1936, but he was not there and presumed dead somewhere.
Another newspaper article on Stark in the Weekly Reflex of Jan. 23, 1936, stated that he was "a nationally known authority on blind flying."'




The Salt Lake Telegram newspaper of Sept. 22, 1939 carried the headline: "Aviator's body rests in S.L."

After more than 3 1/2 years, Stark's body was found by a sheepherder.
This story referred to Stark as the "ace blind flier of the department of commerce." He survived his plane crash, but not the winter conditions of trying to walk to civilization.
-If you conduct a Google search for "Howard Stark," you will find six full pages of results all on the fictional Howard Stark of Marvel comics and movies (including posts that speculate on Marvel bringing the character back to life).
Finally, at the top of page 7 of a Google search results is an article in Vintage Plane magazine from May of 2002 about this real life Howard Stark. Its headline is: "Howard Stark: The Pioneer Aviator of instrument flying."
This article, by John M. Miller, says that Stark was flying a Stinson Model S plane for the U.S. Department of Commerce, headed to the West Coast to give more instructors to other flyers about using instruments in airplanes.
Ironically, Stark had never been west before and his plane and equipment were not designed for the high altitude flying of Utah. The author believes he made an emergency landing in a snowstorm and froze to death trying to walk to safety in deep snow and minus 20 degree temperatures.
The author of the article stated that "Howard Stark is really the almost forgotten but true father of today's instrument flying … Howard Stark, Charles A. Lindbergh and Clyde Pangborn are my civilian pilot heroes ... Stark's 1-2-3 system has served as the basis for what we know now as partial-panel flying."
So, there you have it. A snapshot of the real Howard Stark. A first-class pilot and a civilian one, just like the fictional Howard Stark.
Note that the first mention of the fictional Howard Stark in Marvel comics was in the Iron Man comics of 1970. Iron Man made his first debut in 1963, along with Tony Stark. The father, Howard Stark, was added 7 seven years later and it is highly likely that the two Marvel comic writers who created Howard Stark were oblivious to the real one, since he is rarely, but unjustly mentioned in history. 

(-Originally published on August 18, 2020 in the Deseret News.)