On February 23rd, 1909, a team of aviation pioneers known as the Aerial Experiment Association, led by Alexander Graham Bell, gather to test an aeroplane that can "carry the weight of a motor and a man". Piloted by John Alexander Douglas McCurdy, the 'Silver Dart' is flown for ¾ of a mile over the surface of Bras d'Or Lake: the first powered heavier-than-air flight in Canada.
I’ve just completed a commemorative song entitled Over Northern Skies. I’ll be recording the song with my Tiller’s Folly band mates, Laurence Knight (bass), Nolan Murray (fiddle & mandolin), and Chris Nordquist (drums). We’ll be recording the song on Monday, June 22nd at Turtle Recorders in White Rock, BC.
Lyrics as follows:
OVER NORTHERN SKIES
music and lyrics by Bruce Coughlan
They’d never seen the likes before, than that cold winter morn
On the ice of Bras d'Or
That “Silver Dart” coursed through the air and the crowd assembled there
They all let out a cheer
McCurdy’s biplane hurdles by
He set his sites upon the Nova Scotia sky
Were there grace to grant my dreams
I would ride the wind, like a bird on high
And if I had wings to fly
I would sail away, over northern skies
Alexander Graham Bell, who we all know so well
Of telephone fame
Gathered the thinkers of the day, oh the tinkers of the trade
To build his flying machine
And the mandate he declared
Do what it takes to put a man into the air
Were there grace to grant my dreams
I would ride the wind, like a bird on high
And if I had wings to fly
I would sail away, over northern skies
At thirty-seven thousand feet, it’s hard to believe
It’s only been a hundred years
That silver biplane caught the air, on a wing and a prayer
And the crowd all cheered
The world advances stride by stride
So never fear to set your sites into the sky
Where there’s grace to grant our dreams
We can ride the wind, like a bird on high
And given wings, we can fly
We can sail away, over northern skies