Thomas Sopwith Documentary 1984

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024
  • Thomas Sopwith who lived from the first days of flight through to the jet age. He died in 1989 aged 101.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 501

  • @HarryFlashmanVC
    @HarryFlashmanVC 2 роки тому +50

    He lived to see the Harrier's success against the Argentinian airforce. He knew the Wrights and Bleriot.. what a life!

  • @ockertbrits6907
    @ockertbrits6907 7 років тому +84

    What a motivational documentary! Started from scratch, achieved greatness, closed down overnight in a show of ingratitude, started from scratch a second time and reached the top. All the while staying humble. His aircraft are a testimony of this man.

    • @rjlchristie
      @rjlchristie 5 років тому +7

      Started from scratch? He could afford to buy two airplanes, spend a fiver on joy rides etc.
      I'd say he had a handsome pecuniary head start.

  • @robm.4512
    @robm.4512 3 роки тому +20

    “Pure luck.”
    Now that is pure class!
    Thank you for uploading this, it’s a gem.

  • @jaggar28
    @jaggar28 5 років тому +37

    96 years old at the time of the interview, and he still remembers everything in detail!!! Fascinating!

    • @DotepenecPL
      @DotepenecPL Рік тому +2

      And he speaks so clearly I have no issues understanding him.
      I am not a native speaker, never ever been to Britain either.

    • @falcony100
      @falcony100 8 місяців тому

      only few reach that age with such remarkable memories,,,, usually those dramatic experience remain engraved in the brain of those who stay alive

  • @hugostiglitz6914
    @hugostiglitz6914 4 роки тому +14

    I met Thomas Sopwith I think it was 1986 at Goodwood. I was an Aeronautical Engineering student and he was getting an award of some kind.
    I was there really by accident as I was doing some work experience for an Aircraft Engineering company and got a flight to Goodwood in a Tiger Moth.
    Still have a couple of pictures of the day.

  • @jamiegrover3181
    @jamiegrover3181 8 років тому +207

    RIP Sir Thomas Sopwith. What a remarkable and extraordinary gentleman.

  • @chipbaker2025
    @chipbaker2025 4 роки тому +89

    In the mid 70's I was an Army recruiter in Bangor Maine. On one particular Saturday I was picking up my new pickup at the Datsun dealer in Corinth. I had become friendly with the owner. While there an old biplane landed in his back field. As it got closer I recognized it as a Sopwith Camel. The owner and the pilot were old friends. The pilot gave all the owners kids a ride. When talking with the pilot I asked "how he came to own a Sopwith Camel" He asked me what I called the plane and I told him it was a Sopwith. Most people think it's a Shopwith. Told him that as a young boy I was really into WWI fighter planes. I asked him if I could have a ride too. He said he only had enough fuel to get to Greenville Me. I told him that would be fine, and got the ride. My wife was a little miffed because Greenville was a hundred mile drive in the wrong direction from where we were supposed to go shopping that afternoon. My only biplane ride, what an experience. My wife got an extensive ride for her troubles In the Moosehead Lake area.

    • @Mike-01234
      @Mike-01234 3 роки тому +3

      I grew up in the 70's and 80's good friend of my grandparents was a pilot. He became a pilot before the FAA existed he said when he learned to fly there was no license he owned a Sopwith biplane. He must have been born around 1905 or 1910 my grandfather was born in 1910 he was around his age. He told me how he learned to fly as a young man in 1920-30s's after going to a local barn flying show guy landed a biplane took people up in it. He also offered lessons he became friends he said they would land their biplanes in lots like on the edge of towns used them like cars. Back then cities didn't butt up together like today always an open lot to land on. All though the years he flew later years in the 70's he had a Cessna 172 I remember he said that all those years never had one emergency like engine out anything. I'm 53 now back then I was in my 20's I wish I talked to him more oddly back then didn't seem like that interesting to me in my early teens and 20s.

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk 8 місяців тому

      How did you get a "ride" in a small single-seat aeroplane like a Sopwith Camel? There's barely room for the pilot as it is.

    • @Strakin
      @Strakin 7 місяців тому

      Yes i wondered about this too. Cant have been a Camel@@HO-bndk

    • @stevetackett581
      @stevetackett581 Місяць тому

      @@HO-bndkit was likely a 2 seater. Trainer type

    • @stevetackett581
      @stevetackett581 Місяць тому

      Or a replica

  • @MrDaiseymay
    @MrDaiseymay 4 роки тому +21

    What a amazing man, and generation. At 96, he was so bright and intelligent, his vocabulary and memory as bright as a man half his age. He died 28/01/1989. aged 101 years old--or should that be--young? Such heroes can never be praised enough. Truly, a man of his time.

  • @stewartw.9151
    @stewartw.9151 7 років тому +42

    That is how an interview should be conducted! Skilled interviewing by Ray Baxter, and Sopwith was a brilliant and modest man - as shown at the end when he attributes his success to 'Pure luck".

  • @Michael-0000
    @Michael-0000 2 роки тому +24

    Truly remarkable man! From a Blériot to a Hawker Harrier in a single lifetime. Makes one realise just how recent a technolgy, air travel is!

  • @TakersMissy
    @TakersMissy 6 років тому +39

    This was SO cool! Thank you for sharing this priceless gem of living history with us! I first heard of the "Sopwith Camel" as a little 4-year-old girl who was, of course, enamored with "Peanuts" and Snoopy's pursuit of that "Bloody Red Baron"! :-) Plus, it was so wonderful to see Sir Thomas Sopwith, a refined, dignified, and humble man of class - still very articulate and well-spoken at 96 years young! They certainly don't make 'em like him anymore. RIP Sir Tom.

  • @adrianrosenlund-hudson8789
    @adrianrosenlund-hudson8789 3 роки тому +10

    Raymond Baxter. One of the voices of my childhood. I remember him presenting air shows on TV back in the '70s. Great documentary. Thanks for sharing!

  • @carlT1986
    @carlT1986 6 років тому +9

    What a man. He had a number of equally extraordinary contemporaries. He and they created what is now modern aviation. He is a man to be emulated and admired

  • @techElephant
    @techElephant Рік тому +5

    Tommy Sopwith was truly an icon of British aviation, however it's also worth mentioning that good old Raymond Baxter was also a WW2 Spitfire pilot! Wonderful interview - thank you for posting.

  • @racebannon3267
    @racebannon3267 8 років тому +73

    I love watching this interview. What a piece of living history .

  • @rtreadwell7887
    @rtreadwell7887 4 роки тому +6

    Several years ago, quite by chance, I came across a little church near Kings Sombourne in Hampshire. This I discovered to be the last resting place of Sir Thomas and his wife. How wonderful to see him enthusiastically reminiscing about his life, and with such a delightful sense of humour.

  • @ricardoroberto100
    @ricardoroberto100  4 роки тому +103

    I am getting some silly comments about the sound quality. This is a very old vhs tape not some modern HD recording! Its perfectly listenable through earphones or your tv etc. I cant do anything else about it sorry. Any comments about poor sound quality are deleted. Thanks for understanding.

    • @johnlumb1078
      @johnlumb1078 4 роки тому +8

      Ignore them they obviously were not about then. Even then the sound was bad hahaha....loved the video keep them coming.

    • @vintagestrings6
      @vintagestrings6 4 роки тому +11

      Do not let ignorant people ever bother you. 👍

    • @TheFinnmacool
      @TheFinnmacool 4 роки тому +2

      When I was young we had to watch MANY shows in a snow ball. Older folks (I'm a fresh 45) know what that means. Didn't bother me none. I mean, IT WAS INSPECTOR GADGET out of a Detroit station!!!!!! Snow/Fuzz distortion! Whatever, it's a cat!!!!

    • @jmad627
      @jmad627 4 роки тому +5

      ricardoroberto100 didn't bother me at all. I didn't know anything about this gentleman before seeing this documentary, and really enjoyed it. He was quite interesting.

    • @TheFinnmacool
      @TheFinnmacool 4 роки тому +6

      Honestly anyone who complains about anything they get for free, especially wisdom......well how does it go? "Do not cast pearls before swine."

  • @thepilotboy
    @thepilotboy 10 років тому +85

    "Pure luck."
    I wish I could have met this man.

    • @spaxspore
      @spaxspore 8 років тому +10

      +thepilotboy eloquently put by a legend. RIP

    • @vilstef6988
      @vilstef6988 5 років тому +5

      What an unassuming reply! I would add imagination to this. Yes, I would have liked to meet him too!

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 4 роки тому +3

      No kidding huh?? What a guy. What humility and class! How many great, courageous, talented, genius level pioneers, who've had such a profound impact on the whole World and on the future, attribute their success to "pure luck"? That really stood out to me!

  • @morgandog9
    @morgandog9 11 років тому +5

    Great doco,Thanks for sharing. I grew up in Kingston upon Thames and now work for Hawker Pacific In Cairns Australia, One hunderd years ago his man gave my home town an industry,and now his legacy is providing my family a new life over here in Oz. Thanks Sir Thomas!

  • @goratgo1970
    @goratgo1970 7 років тому +16

    Fly on Sir Sopwith! Another great man who took those lucky chances, and that we owe gratitude for our freedom. Very well done interview.

  • @williamdudman500
    @williamdudman500 6 років тому +85

    I was fortunate enough to have been the BBC Film Cameraman on this historic programme but I must have been working on other programmes when it was transmitted and only have short excerpts courtesy of "Sopwith at 100" provided to me by RAF Museum Hendon. If anybody can provide a copy for my archive it would be good.I remember he put his long life partly down to the consumption of his "Sopwith Cocktail" , lots of dark rum, grenadine and ice!

    • @HistoricAeroEngines
      @HistoricAeroEngines 5 років тому +9

      I congratulate you on this recording. Sir Tom is an heroic character in British aviation and this recording is so very important and well presented.

    • @davidbarlow431
      @davidbarlow431 5 років тому +5

      LMAO! British aviators have always been a boozy lot and I think we may have discovered the founding father of the tradition! What a character - they truly don't make 'em like that anymore. RIP Sir Thomas Sopwith, you legacy will live on.

    • @GaryArmstrongmacgh
      @GaryArmstrongmacgh 4 роки тому +2

      Very outstanding, as an American, to watch. Great piece of history work. Both in terms of your national history and my interest in aircraft! I love the BBC!

    • @TheFinnmacool
      @TheFinnmacool 4 роки тому

      Amazing!

    • @breemangaming6948
      @breemangaming6948 4 роки тому

      Thank you very much Mr Dudman. This is a beautiful piece of history.

  • @OneWorldHistory
    @OneWorldHistory 12 років тому +35

    Wonderful. It is marvelous how well this man's memory and intelligence remains so very fresh in his mid 90s. Courage and ingenuity, meshed with a bit of wealth and immense joy.
    Thanks for upload.

  • @kenfisher6290
    @kenfisher6290 6 років тому +7

    As a boy I read all the books by W E Johns about flying in the Great War, with many details of the different aircraft and how they flew. This documentary brought it all back and added credence to the tales of flying the Camel. Thank you so much for uploading this.

  • @silentotto5099
    @silentotto5099 7 років тому +6

    I recall the announcement when he died. At first, I was stunned because I'd assumed he was long dead. Then, I felt very saddened because all that time he'd been alive but I'd never heard anything of him. As this short documentary shows, the tales he knew. What a life!

  • @DailyGrindAus
    @DailyGrindAus 3 роки тому +7

    Amazing documentary of a legendary man...typical of his generation, famous for his deeds and actions and contribution to society, understated and generous to others.

  • @Aerospacer77
    @Aerospacer77 3 роки тому +7

    I could listen to this guys stories for hours! I absolutely love this stuff. God bless all the brave pilots and innovators who shaped aviation history.

  • @robertnaseby7339
    @robertnaseby7339 2 роки тому +2

    Sir Thomas Sopwith was my grandfathers cousin,My mothers maiden name is Sopwith.Great to watch this documentary about him.

  • @pjkentucky
    @pjkentucky 4 роки тому +4

    And he lived to tell about it....so many early aviators had early deaths. Thanks for the great video and happy this interview was done to preserve such important firsthand history.

  • @andiarrohnds5163
    @andiarrohnds5163 7 років тому +49

    This video is a gem

  • @dtmjax5612
    @dtmjax5612 4 роки тому +5

    Amazing gentleman for sure. Pure luck? Not a chance, Sir Thomas! Great video, thanks for posting this.

  • @Landotter1
    @Landotter1 11 років тому +21

    I love how he is very humble, down to earth, just an all-around nice man, who didn't seem to let fame and fortune wreck a great human being. Bravo! I'll bet he was a really cool friend to have, in person.

  • @walteralter9061
    @walteralter9061 3 роки тому +3

    Very pleased to have found this interview. As a WWII warbird buff lately looking into the birthplace of civilization's dependency upon the aeroplane in WWI, this meetup with one of the giants in aviation was a treat. "Pure luck". Yes. And after a bit of reflection on the fundamentals of existence - still yes.

  • @mgytitanic1912
    @mgytitanic1912 8 років тому +32

    "If you can fly a Sopwith Camel, you can fly anything" I love the Hawker Aircraft, especially the Hurricane but until now I never knew it had been Sopwith. I always thought Sopwith had been bought up by Hawkers. It is true what they say. Every day really is a school day.

  • @catmandenny
    @catmandenny 3 роки тому +9

    I suppose I have a less discriminating ear, but I find the sound quality to be just fine. Thank you for uploading this. I had always wondered how the Sopwith Camel got its name. I had no idea Sopwith was a person's name. I spent more than an hour further researching Sir Sopwith after viewing your video. He was an incredible man.

    • @ricardoroberto100
      @ricardoroberto100  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you very much. You probably have decent equipment to listen through too. I am glad you found the video interesting.

  • @MrSubielove
    @MrSubielove 4 роки тому +4

    I want to give thanks to the person who uploaded the video. and the person who conducted the interview. def. a documentation worth watching. And wow, the man lived a long life. I am very happy to hear his narrations.

  • @karadaglar77
    @karadaglar77 11 років тому +15

    "pure luck!" I bursted with laughter and tears... bowing to the honesty and purity of this true gentleman. God bless his soul. Thanks for putting this wonderful documentary online.

  • @jeffmoore9487
    @jeffmoore9487 8 років тому +22

    Riding the wave of flight evolution through 7 decades (from box kite airplanes, through 2 world wars, to the first working jump jet) seems so unlikely as to be unbelievable. "Luck" + ? This man's a champ.

  • @garyjohnston6248
    @garyjohnston6248 4 роки тому +4

    A fascinating man and life story. They should make a movie about this man. RIP Sir Thomas Sopwith. Always a pleasure to hear of a wonderful persons life.

    • @ricardoroberto100
      @ricardoroberto100  4 роки тому +1

      I thought the same. Would make an excellent movie. Just as long as they dont have Tom Cruise playing Sopwith :)

  • @nigelcarren
    @nigelcarren 6 років тому +3

    Those crazy Belgians and their potatoes! I am halfway through making a 1/1 Sopwith Camel nosecone and cockpit/instrument panel for a music-video. Knowing the spirit of the man behind it all has honestly made this process much easier. Fabulous interview about a fabulous man, who created a fabulous flying machine. Thank you and RIP sir.

  • @GeorgeSmith1066
    @GeorgeSmith1066 3 роки тому +4

    What a wonderful interview with an amazing man. They really don’t make them like that anymore - planes or people!

  • @richardshort3914
    @richardshort3914 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for posting this.
    I shall try to emulate Sir Thomas' reason for success.

  • @TheShizue777
    @TheShizue777 11 років тому +6

    Thank you very, very much, ricardoroberto100! This Thomas Sopwith documentary represents the best of the best on UA-cam. All of us just have to be thankful for posters like you who share these gems.

  • @danielledykgraaf6483
    @danielledykgraaf6483 4 роки тому +10

    "Pure luck" ....Still laughing... Thank you sooooo much for recording a living history before his passing. What a tremendous documentary...Fantastically done..... "BRAVOO" as said in the U.K.

  • @Sgt_Bill_T_Co
    @Sgt_Bill_T_Co 3 роки тому +3

    A huge thanks for preserving this video, a wonderful tribute to a truly great man!

  • @PIPZZZ02
    @PIPZZZ02 11 років тому +2

    So glad I found this - totally fascinating.
    I wish documentaries were of this standard nowadays. Now we have super-fast editing, historical re-creation , intrusive music ....but here you have the unbeatable format; simple interview, informative voice-over & historical footage. Perfect!
    Many, many thanks for this upload.

  • @robertmatch6550
    @robertmatch6550 3 роки тому +1

    What a lovely interview. Thamk you for posting this.

  • @HO-bndk
    @HO-bndk 8 місяців тому +1

    Sir Thomas didn't usually agree to be interviewed and turned down authors wanting to write biographies of him, so this is a special treasure.

  • @zorgitron
    @zorgitron 8 років тому +71

    "It wasn't like a modern crash where you hit the ground very hard indeed."

    • @brianmasters1125
      @brianmasters1125 4 роки тому +2

      Definition of a good landing - one you walk away from.

    • @jazldazl9193
      @jazldazl9193 4 роки тому +4

      Flying's very safe, crashing is dangerous - Spike M

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 4 роки тому +1

      I love the way he laughed right after he said: "You could do quite a lot of crashing without hurting anybody". I must've rewound that part 6 or 7 times, and every time Sir Sopwith chuckled, I chuckled with him.

    • @lioncurlew
      @lioncurlew 3 роки тому

      It has now been established that Von Richtofen was shot down by a Canadian Soldier on the ground with a. 303 Lee Enfield

    • @JohnyG29
      @JohnyG29 2 роки тому

      @@lioncurlew No it hasn't. He was most probably hit by the Camels attacking him, or rather more unlikely by an Aussie soldier from the ground.
      Unfortunately the whole thing has become a rather nationalistic thing now, so you'll never get an un-biased view.

  • @wxreporter
    @wxreporter 11 років тому +4

    Wonderful documentary....they don't make them like that any longer.....Tom Sopwith and Raymond Baxter.....may they both rest in peace.

  • @pimpompoom93726
    @pimpompoom93726 8 років тому +9

    What a great man. I'm honored to hear his story.

  • @FelixRigg
    @FelixRigg 2 роки тому +1

    Fascinating. Thank you so much for posting this.

  • @pingpong5000
    @pingpong5000 8 років тому +5

    Thank you ricaroroberto, this is a fabulous posting, Thomas Sopwith rocks. One hundred years ago risking life and limb to pursue an interest, bit different from the modern playstation generation. Oh to have been born 120 years ago.

  • @dannyinaus
    @dannyinaus 8 років тому +23

    I would love to see a full blown feature movie of Sopwith's life. It would have everything that crowds like - action, romance, thrills, spills then World War I. What more could you ask for!

    • @bnipmnaa
      @bnipmnaa 7 років тому

      That sounds incredibly crass & vulgar.

    • @stevendalbor9495
      @stevendalbor9495 6 років тому +4

      Well, they did Spitfire in 1942 with David Niven, and that was pretty good. So who knows.

    • @Dubhain82
      @Dubhain82 6 років тому +5

      I would pay to watch that movie. Amazing life story. Cool guy.

  • @harri2626
    @harri2626 9 місяців тому

    Interviewer Raymond Baxter was a Spitfire pilot in WW2 so knew what Sopwith had achieved and the debt of gratitude we owed him. A remarkable and modest man. One of the chief designers of the Camel and other Sopwith models was Herbert Smith from Skipton, Yorkshire, and his legacy has only recently been acknowledged with a blue plaque outside Skipton Town Hall. Soon after WW1, and the liquidation of the Sopwith company, Smith went to Japan to help establish the Mitsubishi aviation company.

  • @adamskinner5868
    @adamskinner5868 6 років тому +2

    What a wonderful little doco about a great Englishman, brave, clever, innovative, competitive even humble, honest and lucky, what a guy. Makes me want to know more.

  • @mgytitanic1912
    @mgytitanic1912 8 років тому +15

    This was a fabulous documentary, thank you for uploading

  • @fredmiller6482
    @fredmiller6482 7 місяців тому

    This fellow was certainly an excellent engineer and innovator but he was also a gentleman. Very well spoken, measured, humble and quite entertaining to listen too. It's a shame we humans must get old and die. I think he might be one of the ones we would like to keep around for a bit longer.

  • @PaisleyPatchouli
    @PaisleyPatchouli 10 місяців тому +1

    A brilliant interview with an absolutely brilliant gentleman; Sir Thomas Sopwith was to fledgeling aviation what Henry Ford was to automotive development.
    Here, at age 96, he recalls details of his endeavors going back to pre WWI, and including the development of fighter planes such as illustrious Sopwith Camel and the Hawker Hurricane, among other famous aircraft which were instrumental in the winning of both world wars.
    Bravo! and thanks for posting this fantastic piece of history!

  • @philsteele3134
    @philsteele3134 10 років тому +12

    A wonderful doc about an extraordinary man. Very interesting and a wealth of interesting stories.

    • @simonframpton2554
      @simonframpton2554 6 років тому

      We who cherish freedom owe him absolute respect and gratitude he is an example to us all of how to conduct our lives

  • @davidgould5708
    @davidgould5708 4 роки тому +2

    Massive thanks for the upload. What a treat and a pleasure to see this documentary showcasing one of our (britains) greatest innovators. What a very very different time he harks back to. Brilliant stuff.

  • @MrMattFinish
    @MrMattFinish 11 років тому +3

    Another excellent documentary on YT. Sir Thomas was a true gentleman along with his colleagues of the day. Just shows how societies in the modern era has eroded and how much money & greed has overtaken innovation & invention.

  • @paulmanson253
    @paulmanson253 6 років тому +1

    I just came across this wonderful piece. This is one of the reasons UA-cam is so popular. What we have lost since that film was made saddens me. Can you imagine the outcry now for someone having a polar bear skin on his wall? The sky would start falling. I am glad I am old. Let the self righteous inherit the world they are so insistent to create . Piss on them. Wonderful interview of a truly remarkable man.

  • @redblack8414
    @redblack8414 10 місяців тому

    These pioneers created an era that will never be seen again. Man was flying for the first time and in 1914 he was fighting in the sky for the first time.

  • @24th1879
    @24th1879 11 років тому +7

    How I wish I could have sat and talked to him myself,... what an amazing life, what an amazing man.

  • @heinzdog9
    @heinzdog9 12 років тому +2

    Great video. This world needs more men like him. I hope I'm in as good of mental shape when I'm his age.

  • @juniorflyingaces
    @juniorflyingaces 9 років тому +10

    Amazing man, pretty much seen and done it all! I pass his memorial almost every day on Green Street W1 London. He deserved everything that came to him.

  • @Rorkazak
    @Rorkazak 4 роки тому +2

    Fantastic piece of work, ricardoroberto. Tom Sopwith was definitely a major stud

  • @mauriceupton1474
    @mauriceupton1474 4 роки тому +3

    awesome to find this one.......watching from Auckland New Zealand

  • @duffysullivan2794
    @duffysullivan2794 6 років тому +8

    Wow! I had never known that Sopwith was an actual man. I have known of his planes, his WW1 fighters: the Pup, the Triplane, Camel, but never was exposed to the man himself. And now to find out he lived to be 101!! I am stunned. I was never aware of him until seeing this UA-cam video. Imagine, he was present and instrumental a the very birth of flight, and lived to see man fly to the moon! Unbelievable.

    • @Mercy384
      @Mercy384 3 роки тому

      He got to see the su 27 too! Really modern look when it first came out in 85'

  • @markcorboy8528
    @markcorboy8528 4 роки тому +3

    Privileged to have watched this interview. Cheers

  • @endwood
    @endwood 9 років тому +12

    Gone but not forgotten:-) The dreams of men like Tom & others put us where we are today, forever in their debt:-)

  • @janecrossland4922
    @janecrossland4922 8 років тому +15

    A true Legend in Aviation, and what amazing life.

  • @hhoward14
    @hhoward14 12 років тому +1

    Priceless filmed interview, two heroes of the twentieth century, with splendid photographs of experiment, and achievement. Tommy's vision and confidence playing out our history.
    Students will watch this always...
    "What was his name Tommy?"-- "Trenchard!". (smirk)

  • @rubicon-oh9km
    @rubicon-oh9km 10 років тому +4

    Amazing man. We can learn so much from their (older folks) wisdom.

  • @Aerospacer77
    @Aerospacer77 3 роки тому +1

    Great video. Thanks for posting. Sir Thomas Sopwith was a legend. The first model plane I ever built was a Sopwith Camel. I must have been 7 or 8 years old. I am still intrigued by aviation today.

  • @ricardoroberto100
    @ricardoroberto100  11 років тому +5

    Thanks for the kind comments it's appreciated. I have not been able to post any new content for a while but I hope to soon....

  • @silasmarner7586
    @silasmarner7586 4 роки тому +8

    Sharp as a tack well into his nineties. Impressive and inspirational.

  • @davidcolley7180
    @davidcolley7180 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much absolutely wonderful

  • @uiolkijhgh
    @uiolkijhgh 7 років тому +44

    This guy. Is one of the reasons why were not speaking German

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk 5 років тому +11

      Judging from how you wrote that, you can barely even speak English.

    • @456swagger
      @456swagger 4 роки тому +7

      No it's your fault that you can't speak German. It just takes time and effort to learn.

    • @c4nucksens8tion
      @c4nucksens8tion 4 роки тому +2

      lol. Look at all these salty dudes LUL ^^

    • @robkunkel8833
      @robkunkel8833 3 роки тому

      “Judging from how” Is this proper English, Mr Ford? No. “How” is not a noun and one should endeavor to use a noun in that application. A very good video. Generally, good comments. Quite enlightening.

    • @uiolkijhgh
      @uiolkijhgh 3 роки тому

      Harry Ford better then you buddy

  • @HistoricAeroEngines
    @HistoricAeroEngines 10 років тому +14

    Raymond Baxter and Tommy Sopwith! Great interview by a WW2 veteran pilot of a true British aviation pioneer.

  • @Lagg3fan
    @Lagg3fan 11 років тому +2

    WOW! I was browsing old history and came upon this... Simply amazing vid... I especially like the ending where Sir Tommy stated his success was based on "pure luck!" Humble man. Thx for putting this on YT. Hope there are more old interviews like this somewhere out there...

  • @Ripskin16
    @Ripskin16 9 років тому +9

    Wonderful interview!

  • @scroungasworkshop4663
    @scroungasworkshop4663 4 місяці тому

    Absolutely brilliant interview and I feel very lucky to have seen it. How many other people would have a claim to helping their country win 3 wars.

  • @robertknights3726
    @robertknights3726 2 роки тому +1

    What an extraordinary man... and what a video... incredible story

  • @cluelessbeekeeping1322
    @cluelessbeekeeping1322 4 роки тому +5

    Thank you so very much for posting this!

  • @ricardoroberto100
    @ricardoroberto100  11 років тому +1

    Thanks for the kind comment. Glad you enjoyed it.

  • @JinixTheElder
    @JinixTheElder 12 років тому

    Excellent watch. Thanks for posting this.
    The very last comments of Mr Sopwith on this video gave me a good chuckle to end it with.

  • @91cecil
    @91cecil 9 років тому +27

    A great and humble man.

  • @BaddaBigBoom
    @BaddaBigBoom 5 років тому +1

    Ahh this is great! I live less than a 15 minute walk from the site of the Sopwith factory in Kingston. Great to see this interview.

  • @funkyalfonso
    @funkyalfonso 6 років тому +1

    Hard to believe I am actually watching this. An extraordinary man and it's wonderful to see Raymond Baxter, one of 'The Few'.

  • @Legal-gv4gg
    @Legal-gv4gg 6 років тому +2

    As a devotee of aircraft and flying in general for decades- what luck- to stumble over this video of such an amazing and accomplished aviation whirlwind, purely by happenstance. Who knew, from buying 2 Wright bros. 'flying kites' his company would eventually develop world-famous Harriers. Then he attributes this astonishing career to "pure luck"! How humble can one be !!! Thank-you for posting. But PLEASE- get it out of the "Music" category.

  • @slnolefan
    @slnolefan 10 років тому +1

    Excellent! I really enjoyed it. I build and fly large scale WW1 RC Planes. 3 of them are Sopwith's. Thanks for sharing. Timeless classic!

  • @OldFliersGroup
    @OldFliersGroup 10 років тому +3

    Bravo Thomas. You have slipped the surly bonds of Earth and danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings.

  • @1teamski
    @1teamski 6 років тому +1

    This is truly amazing. A wonderful interview with an incredible man..... "Pure luck!"

  • @BIG-DIPPER-56
    @BIG-DIPPER-56 11 місяців тому

    What an absolute honor to see that - THANKS !

  • @sonnyburnett8725
    @sonnyburnett8725 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent video, thank you so much.

  • @jt66radioguy4
    @jt66radioguy4 4 роки тому +1

    Wonderful bit of aviation history! Glad this popped up in my feed.

  • @Dave-ty2qp
    @Dave-ty2qp 5 років тому +1

    Sure would have liked to hang out with this gentleman. What a class act.

  • @gettinglost316
    @gettinglost316 3 роки тому +1

    I love how throughout the interview he namedrops friends who started a good percentage of British companys

  • @TomLongusa
    @TomLongusa 5 років тому

    What a complete gem of a video of a man, assuredly a member of the League of Extraordinary Gentleman Club...
    Self made, self assured, and non pretentious.
    Lucky indeed to live a life so welled lived, and till 101yrs old as well.
    RIP Sir Thomas Sopwith
    God Bless