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Dumas #303 Mister Mulligan Wingspan: 30" Class: Sport Flyer Building Skill / Flying Skill: Medium / Medium
Howard DGA-6 Mister Mulligan
The Bendix Trophy was a cross-country race from the west coast to the
site of the National Air Races in Cleveland, Ohio, and typically was the
starting event of the week-long aviation festival. The Thompson Trophy
was awarded to the winner of the unlimited division in close-course
pylon racing at the National Air Races.[citation needed]
The sole original DGA-6 was constructed in 1934. It featured a steel
tube fuselage with a plywood-skinned wing. Howard freely admitted he was
inspired by "seeing the Monocoupe from the wrong end" during air races;
The DGA-6 can thus be termed an "overgrown Monocoupe".
While en route to the 1934 air races, oxygen and fuel system problems
caused an off-field landing which damaged the gear and propeller. The
aircraft could not be repaired in time and missed the 1934 season.
Howard and Israel flew the DGA-6 in the 30 Aug. 1935 Bendix and won with
a speed of 238.70 m.p.h., and Harold Neumann racing the DGA-6 flew at
220.19 mph (354.36 km/h) in winning the 2 Sept. 1935 Thompson Trophy at
the 1935 National Air Races. No other pilot or single aircraft had ever
won both races. Howard's DGA-6 also had the distinction of being the
only racer during the golden age of airshows to evolve into a successful
commercial production aircraft, first as the DGA-8 and DGA-9, and later
the DGA-11 and DGA-12.
Howard's engineering advantage was his low-drag airframe and the use of
the 850 horsepower (630 kW) Pratt & Whitney Wasp radial. The fuel
capacity of the four-seat Mister Mulligan made the difference in the
Bendix race as Howard and Israel beat Roscoe Turner by less than a
minute thanks to two fewer fueling stops in the race from Burbank,
California, to Cleveland, although Turner's 1,000 hp (750 kW) Pratt &
Whitney Hornet on his Wedell-Williams Model 44 racer gave him the power
advantage.
Unfortunately, the DGA-6's days on the national air race scene were
limited. The next year, Howard and his wife Maxine were injured when
Mister Mulligan lost a propeller blade and crash-landed near Crownpoint,
New Mexico during the latter stages of the 1936 Bendix (New York - Los
Angeles) race. Howard recovered from the serious injuries resulting from
the crash, but lost a leg in the accident and Mister Mulligan was
destroyed. Roscoe Turner met a similar fate, ground-looping on a rough
field in Texas. The misfortunes of Howard and Turner opened the way for
Arkansan Louise Thaden in her Beechcraft Staggerwing to become the first
woman to win a national air trophy.
The success of Mister Mulligan led to the formation of the Howard
Aircraft Corporation on January 1, 1937.
34 years after the accident, racing enthusiast, Bob Reichardt tracked
down Mister Mulligan's crash site and was surprised to find most of the
parts were still in usable condition, protected by local dry, mountain
climate. With the salvaged parts as patterns, Reichardt was able to
recreate Mister Mulligan but was killed in 1977 while doing a timed run
over the Tonopah, Nevada dry lake.
A second replica DGA-6 was built by Jim Younkin of Springdale, AR.
Younkin and "Bud" Dake also designed and built the Mullicoupe, an
original design utilizing features of both Mister Mulligan and the
Monocoupe 90 which inspired it.
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The Build: CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE...
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NEXT:
Easy Built Models Kit FF-65 Grumman Wildcat
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