The Perry Beadle T.1 was a single-seat, single engine biplane built and flown in the United Kingdom in 1913.
The fuselage was flat sided and tapered to the tail, but had a curved decking which sloped down both fore and aft from the under wing cockpit.
This improved the pilot's forward view; a cut-out in the trailing edge of the upper wing aided his upward vision.
In the following May a more powerful version with increased wing area and smaller interplane gap came to Brooklands, designated the T.2.
The undercarriage was simplified by removing the skids, leaving a simple single axle supported by pairs of inverted V struts.