.
Bowers is famed in the general aviation
community for his work with General Aviation News. Writing 26 books and over 800 articles detailing historic aircraft
for a column called "Of Wings and Things", Bowers was a fixture of the newspaper for decades. Also an engineer at Boeing
, he was an avid aviation photographer and also designed homebuilt
aircraft such as the Fly Baby
and Namu II
. Bowers also completed and flew a Detroit G1 Gull
primary glider
.
Bowers lived in Seattle for most of his life. He served as a contributing editor for Sentry Publications' twin magazine titles Wings and Airpower, drawing on a lifetime of aviation photographs of his own, and of a vast archive collected through his employment at Boeing
. Bowers died from cancer in 2003.
Under its Fly Baby entry Jane's All The World's Aircraft
, 1964–1965, says of Bowers:
Mr. Peter Bowers, an aeronautical engineer with Boeing in Seattle, is a principal source of detailed information on vintage aircraft in the United States, and has provided much of the data for a number of replicas of 1914-18 War aircraft now under construction or flying. He is currently engaged on a redesign of the Fokker D.VIIFokker D.VIIThe Fokker D.VII was a German World War I fighter aircraft designed by Reinhold Platz of the Fokker-Flugzeugwerke. Germany produced around 3,300 D.VII aircraft in the summer and autumn of 1918. In service, the D.VII quickly proved itself to be a formidable aircraft...
monoplane of 1918 in association with Herr Rheinhold Platz, the original designer, with a view to starting a replica building program.
A full-scale Fokker TriplaneFokker Dr.IThe Fokker Dr.I Dreidecker was a World War I fighter aircraft built by Fokker-Flugzeugwerke. The Dr.I saw widespread service in the spring of 1918...
replica of this period has been under construction by Mr. Bowers for nearly five years. At least six others are known to be under construction from plans that he has provided.
Another aircraft built by Mr. Bowers is a full-scale replica of the WrightWright brothersThe Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur , were two Americans credited with inventing and building the world's first successful airplane and making the first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight, on December 17, 1903...
Model EX of 1911, the first aeroplane to cross the American continent. This machine was tested as a towed sailplane in the Autumn of 1961 and is to be powered by a converted "B" Ford automobile engine from a 1938 Funk monoplane.
In addition to this work on replicas, Mr. Bowers has designed and built a single-seat light aircraft known as the Fly Baby...