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Roland Garros Lifestyle, Biography, Age, Height, Marriage, Family & Information

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Who is a Roland Garros aviator? Discover the Lifestyle page with his biography, Age, Sizes and more on celebrity.tn

You may have known one of the biggest tennis tournaments in the world: Roland-Garros. But do you really know who gave his name to this stadium located west of Paris, and to the international competition that takes place there? Our first thoughts are that Roland Garros is a great tennis player, but on the contrary he was an aviator. And not just any airman. He was the first to cross the Mediterranean non-stop on September 23, 1913.

Roland Garros Lifestyle & Informations

Real name  Roland Adrien Georges Garros
Nickname Roland Garros
nationality French
Profession aviator
Date of Birth October 6, 1888 at age 29
Place of birth Saint-Denis of Reunion
Death October 5, 1918
instead of Vouziers (Ardennes)

Family and Children

Mother Clara Faure
Dad George Garros
brother and sister N\A
Husband/spouse N\A
wedding day N\A
Enfant N\A

Biography

Roland Garros, a very famous civilian aviator before 1914, born October 6, 1888 in Saint-Denis de la Réunion, is one of the exemplary pioneers who profoundly marked the beginnings of aviation.

Indeed, Roland was 20 years old when he discovered aviation. On vacation in Sapicourt, near Reims, he attended the very first edition of the Grande Semaine d’Aviation de la Champagne, a major air meeting. The following year, he learned to pilot on his own aboard an airplane he bought. But that doesn’t stop him, of course. In the process, he received his pilot’s license at the aerodrome of Cholet in Maine-et-Loire.

Roland.G goes on to set world altitude records. 3,950 meters, 4,960 meters, 5,610 meters. Garros distinguished himself in June 1912 by winning the first grand prix of the Aéro-Club de France on the Anjou circuit. But that’s not enough to quench his thirst for challenge. In 1913, he therefore decided to attempt the crossing of the Mediterranean.

The fame of aviator Roland Garros came from his sporting exploits in the plane, and especially from the very first crossing of the Mediterranean Sea, which he made on September 23, 1913 aboard a monoplane.

A year later, another challenge presented itself: the First World War. The plane becomes a weapon. And R.Garros, a war pilot. He even takes part in an invention that will change the face of air combat.

At the beginning of April 1915, Second Lieutenant Garros recorded three consecutive victories in a fortnight, but he was hit by the German flak over Belgium and was taken prisoner. After three years he managed to escape by disguising himself as a German officer. Even if Clémenceau wants to keep him with him as an adviser, the obstinate Garros goes back to battle. His audacity, this time, will be fatal to him: he is shot down on October 5, 1918 above the Ardennes, not without having won a fourth duel.

Today, his name remains associated with the French Open tennis tournament, as it takes place in the stadium that has borne his name since it was built in 1928.

Roland Garros Lifestyle: A Tennis Tournament Named By Aviator’s Name

Hero of the Great War, pioneer of aviation, Roland-Garros is also a man who arouses solid friendships. This is how ten years after his death, in 1928, the tennis stadium used as a setting for the Musketeers with a view to defending their Davis Cup title was named after him, at the request of Emile Lesueur. , president of the Stade Français, former classmate of Garros at HEC… and whose aviator had sponsored entry to the Stade Français several decades earlier.

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