By Randy Malmstrom
Sopwith Scout “Pup”. My photos at Western Antique Aeroplane & Automobile Museum in Hood River, Oregon.
Editor’s notes: This aircraft was constructed by Larry Howard, a retired dentist from Spokane, Washington, who turned to restoring and flying vintage airplanes. After restoring a rare Laird LC1B-300 biplane, he turned his sights on building a reproduction of a Sopwith “Pup” from scratch. In the process of building this reproduction, Howard acquired two original Le Rhone 80 hp rotary engines, with parts from the two engines being used to make a single operational engine by Chuck Wentworth’s Antique Aero restoration shop in Paso Robles, California. After several years of work, Larry Howard’s Sopwith Pup was completed in 2016, 100 years after the original aircraft’s first flight. Issued with the registration N6475 (which incidentally was the identity of a Sopwith Pup flown by Canadian WWI ace Sidney Emerson Ellis), this aircraft made its first flight on October 16, 2016, with local pilot and aircraft restorer Jay Pemberton of Pemberton & Sons Aviation at the controls. Afterwards, Howard kept the airplane housed at Felts Field, Spokane.

In July 2018, Larry Howard donated the aircraft to the Western Antique Aeroplane and Automobile Museum (WAAAM) of Hood River, Oregon. It was the first rotary-engined aircraft to be acquired by the WAAAM. Today, Sopwith Pup N6475 is maintained in airworthy condition by the Western Antique Aeroplane and Automobile Museum.

About the author: 
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Raised in Fullerton, California, Adam has earned a Bachelor's degree in History and is now pursuing a Master's in the same field. Fascinated by aviation history from a young age, he has visited numerous air museums across the United States, including the National Air and Space Museum and the San Diego Air and Space Museum. He volunteers at the Planes of Fame Air Museum in Chino as a docent and researcher, gaining hands-on experience with aircraft maintenance. Known for his encyclopedic knowledge of aviation history, he is particularly interested in the stories of individual aircraft and their postwar journeys. Active in online aviation communities, he shares his work widely and seeks further opportunities in the field.

















