The Huff-Daland Duster, nicknamed the "Puffer," was the first agricultural airplane. Aircraft manufacturer Huff, Daland & Company, Inc. built the first aircraft specifically designed for crop dusting in 1923-1924. Developed to protect the cotton fields of the southern United States against the boll weevil insect.
For over a year, Huff, Daland & Company collaborated with entomologist B.R. Coad and his team at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Delta Lab in Tallulah, Louisiana. They tested various models and engines, and ended up with a large version and smaller version of the Duster. By 1928, the company only produced the small model, the Huff-Daland Duster “Puffer” (Petrel 31), an upgraded version of Petrel Model 5 biplane. Suitable for dusting fields of all size.
First Test Flights, Demonstrations & Commercial Use
- July 28, 1924 First test flight of the Huff-Daland Duster. Test pilot is world-famous Harold Harris on loan from the Army to the USDA.
- Aug. 26, 1924 First public aerial dusting demonstration is hosted in Athens, Georgia, by the Georgia State College of Agriculture (at the University of Georgia), Huff, Daland & Company and the USDA. Loaned Army pilots fly three Huff-Daland Dusters.
September 1924 First commercial airplane dusting for insect control in the United States. Huff, Daland & Company dusts 1,800 acres at 35 cents per acre at Robertshaw Company Plantation at Heathman, Mississippi.
For more information about the development of commercial dusting, see our timeline.