The founder of Scouting, Lieutenant General Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell born in 1857 in England. He lived a 
busy and adventurous life, and as a boy spent much of his spare time in 
open-air pursuits, hunting in the woods, and joining his brothers in 
expeditions by land and in their boats. Thus he developed his powers of 
observation and resourcefulness and acquired many useful skills.
Records of kites are found very early in Chinese history, and it is 
prophetic that they were first used in warfare, specifically in military
 signaling. When messages had to be sent over dangerous country, 
brilliantly colored kites were flown high enough to be seen. The Chinese
 general Han Sin used the kite as early as 200 B.C., when he was 
tunneling beneath the walls of his target—the Wei-Yang palace.
From Korea, too, come the tales of kites in war. Once, on the eve of a
 particularly critical battle, a Korean general attached a lantern to 
the tail of a kite and raised it into the air at night. His soldiers, 
believing this light to be a token of divine assistance, took new 
strength and courage. A later Korean general, when barred by a river 
across his route, flew a string to some people on the opposite bank, and
 thus drew across the ropes for a bridge.
Our earliest record of the kite as a man-lifting affair comes from 
ancient Japan. Two golden images of fish high atop the castle of 
Nagoya-Gyo are said to have motivated this feat. The golden fish 
attracted the greed of a bandit named Ishikawa Goyemon, but the baron 
who occupied the castle 400 years ago kept it heavily guarded. The 
bandit seated himself in a trapeze attached to the tail of a huge kite. 
In the dead of night, his cohorts maneuvered him into the air, and he 
flew to the rooftop. Once there, he stole many of the golden scales from
 the ornaments, then descended and escaped undetected.
Another legend from Japan is about two rival villages that had long 
competed in an annual contest to determine which excelled in the art of 
building and flying kites. Each year the kite-masters offered larger and
 more elaborate entries, but finally it turned into a personal battle 
between the two leading kite-masters. A meeting was arranged one evening
 to settle the issue once and for all. What had started as a friendly 
contest of the winds became a war of words, as the two wizards of 
kite-craft huddled with their supporters around a small Japanese stove 
called a hibachi—a porcelain urn filled with ashes and a few 
burning sticks of charcoal. When it seemed that no conclusion could be 
reached, one of the kite-masters produced a tiny kite about the size of a
 postage stamp and unreeled a gossamer line like a spider web. By using 
only the meager heat from the charcoal stove, he flew and controlled his
 doll-sized kite so well that he won the honors.
Riding up with Kites
About 50 years after Pocock's experiments, man-lifting kites began to 
appear all over the world. Lawrence Hargrave was among the first to 
begin working in earnest. He made many attempts at flight, mostly with 
the birdlike, flapping-wing ornithopters, and he is credited with 
inventing the box kite in 1885. But it was in 1893 that he built three 
large kites and attached them at intervals to a long line. The combined 
weight of his body and this rig came to 208 pounds, but he managed to 
raise himself 16 feet above the ground. At that point, he decided that 
he was quite high enough and returned safely to the earth.
Other man-carrying kites were being flown in England. At Pirbright 
camp in 1894, Captain B. F. S. Baden-Powell of the Scots Guards 
constructed a huge kite 36 feet tall, and it got him off the ground. But
 later that year, with five smaller kites only 12 feet high, he raised 
his 150-pound body to an altitude of 100 feet. Baden-Powell's kites were
 also put to use in transferring mail from the destroyer Daring to 
another ship.
In the Boer War in South Africa, English soldiers were hoisted aloft 
in kites to spy on the enemy. Also in England, Colonel S. F. Cody, the 
first man to fly an airplane in the British Isles, experimented with 
man-lifting kites. His results eclipsed previous efforts, for in 1905 a 
kite of his design lifted a man to—hold your seats—an altitude of 1,600 
feet! Colonel Cody also made flights in an untethered kite powered by a 
12-horsepower engine.
In the United States, where actual flight was 
soon to be realized, men were also flying huge kites. One Lieutenant 
Wise, using a series of four Hargrave-type kites, lifted 229 pounds, 
including a man, over 40 feet into the air. In the same year, manless 
kites were also reaching higher and higher into American skies. W. A. 
Eddy made up a train of nine Malay kites attached to a cord two miles 
long. The top kite of this fantastic rig soared to an alti-tude of 5,595
 feet and remained aloft for 15 hours.
Men had floated aloft in balloons, glided on fabric wings, and risen 
on kites. All that remained was to sever the slender string that bound 
them to the earth. For this, the world looked to the Wrights.
from :http://www.naturalhistorymag.com/

 
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