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Yeager was sent to Okinawa in 1954 to test a Soviet MiG-15 that a North Korean had used to defect. When he stopped test-flying that year, he had logged 10,000 hours in 180 types of military aircraft.
6. Scott Crossfield
When Navy fighter pilot and flight instructor Scott Crossfield heard about the Bell Experimental Sonic XS-1 under construction in 1947, he wrote to its manufacturer proposing that he be named its first test pilot; he offered to fly it for free. Bell did not reply, but no matter: In 1950 Crossfield was hired by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and sent to Edwards Air Force Base in California to fly the world’s hottest X-planes, including the X-1, the tail-less Northrop X-4, the Douglas D-558-I Skystreak and D-558-II Skyrocket, the Convair XF-92A (which he pronounced “under-powered, under- geared, underbraked, and overweight”), and the Bell X-5. He made 100 rocket-plane flights in all. On November 20, 1953, he took the D-558-II to Mach 2.04, becoming the first pilot to fly at twice the speed of sound.
He gained a reputation as a pilot whose flights were jinxed: On his first X-4 flight, he lost both engines; in the Skyrocket, he flamed out; the windshield iced over in the X-1. After a deadstick landing in a North American F-100, he lost hydraulic pressure and the Super Sabre slammed into a hangar wall. Forever after, Chuck Yeager crowed, “The sonic wall was mine; the hangar wall was Crossfield’s.”
Despite the many thrills at Edwards in the Golden Age of X-Planes, Crossfield was seduced by an aircraft on the North American drawing board. In 1955, he quit the NACA and signed on with the manufacturer, where he found his calling with the sinister-looking X-15. Crossfield made the first eight flights of the X-15, learning its idiosyncrasies, and logged another six after NASA and Air Force pilots joined the program. On flight number 4, the fuselage buckled right behind the cockpit on landing, but he had his closest call on the ground, while testing the XLR-99 engine in June 1960. “I put the throttle in the stowed position and pressed the reset switch,” Crossfield wrote in his autobiography Always Another Dawn. “It was like pushing the plunger on a dynamite detonator. X-15 number three blew up with incredible force.” Fire engines rushed to extinguish the blaze, and Crossfield was extracted from the cockpit. “The only casualty was the crease in my trousers,” he told reporters. “The firemen got them wet when they sprayed the airplane with water.” You sure it was the firemen? a reporter asked. Yes, he was sure, he aid. “I pictured the headline: ‘Space Ship Explodes; Pilot Wets Pants.’ ”
7. Erich Hartmann
Unlike the rest of the pilots in “Ten Great,” Erich Hartmann flew only one aircraft type, and did almost all his flying during World War II. But his downing a mindboggling 352 enemy aircraft and earning the title of the Greatest Ace of All Time, No Kidding, places him on this list fair and square.
Hartmann’s mother taught him to fly gliders in his teens. He enlisted in the Luftwaffe in 1940, and his profiency at gunnery school marked him as a rising star. When he arrived on the Eastern Front at age 20, he was nicknamed Bubi (boy) by fellow pilots, and took to the Messerschmitt Me 109 like a duck to water. Hartmann’s winning technique was to fly so close to the enemy that he couldn’t miss. In November 1942 he scored his first victory, and within a year had downed 148 aircraft. The number of medals and awards seemed to keep pace with the number of fallen aircraft, which reached 301 in August 1944.
His superiors deemed him too valuable an asset to remain in combat (he was forced down 16 times) and called him back to test the Messerschmitt Me 262. But Hartmann was dedicated to fighting the Soviets and finagled a reassignment to the front. He was made a group commander and downed another 51 aircraft before Germany surrendered. In less than three years, he had flown 825 combat sorties.
Hartmann spent 10 years in a Russian prison. Three years after his release in 1955, he was commanding West Germany’s first all-jet fighter wing. He remained with the air force for another 15 years.


Comments
One addition to the list I would suggest is Ernst Udet.
Posted by Joanne Jeschonnek on May 21,2008 | 03:28PM
One can never heap too much praise upon the early aviation pioneers. If any other endeavor could top the risk of what they accomplished in working in an unknown environment with untried techniques and in such crafts as would deter or terrorize lesser souls, they accomplished all of this with relish. Born to be wild fits their temperaments. God Bless them all! All others following work with greater standards and precautions.
Posted by Bob Dyslin on May 29,2008 | 01:58PM
A fairly well put together list, but I was a little stymied to see Chuck Yeager above Scott Crossfield. Not taking anything away from Yeager, I think if we are referring to aviation pioneers that move aviation ahead, Crossfield did more. Yeager of course, was the first to exceed the speed of sound in a documented manner and in level flight and for that deserves kudos. Crossfield, was the first to go Mach 2, and Mach 3 (and survive). Then his work with the X-15 setting up hypersonic flight is legendary. Just my humble opinion.
Posted by Al Hallonquist on May 30,2008 | 01:07PM
These 10 individuals were very brave men and women. They put their lives on the line many times and survived due to their courage, fearlessness and expertise. We who fly in today's modern commercial aircraft and those in the military who protect our freedom owe these heroes a multitute of thanks and apprecation for what they accomplished,
Posted by C. F. Jones on June 4,2008 | 07:01PM
Indeed who to leave out. If you include Leveir and Hoover how can you leave out Eric "Winkle" Brown, test pilot extraordinaire. More than 500 types flown, first landings of a jet on a carrier, called by Jimmie Dolittle the master of the calculted risk. Roland Beamont and Jan Zurakowski may be other considerations in that genre. I would include Jackie Cochrane among great lady pilots. One could argue that the presence of female pilots in the U.S. military owes alot to her WASP's who proved that the girls could fly the "heavy iron". And my sentimental favourite is Patty Wagstaff. No ques- tion of her flying skills, and as a role model and a spokes- person for aviation she is very effective.
Posted by Ron Habros on June 8,2008 | 12:04PM
You place Noel Wien at number two? I have never heard of him, and to place someone on such a list due to flights in one state, in one country is interesting? Yet you leave out pioneers like Wiley Post, the father of the pressure suit. Or who can forget Alvin 'Tex' Johnston, who flew many aircraft, and rolled the B-707, not something pilots do every day! It could be a long list.
Posted by John Freedman on June 29,2008 | 08:50AM
Great...proud about these great gentlemen... Still apprehends the trivial document as still have urge to be a pilot..unfortunately I am a software Engineer.. Kudos to all and salute to the great men who are the flag carriers of man kind.. regards Adithya
Posted by Adithya on July 24,2008 | 10:06AM
I agree Ernest Udet should be included, also Martin Schempp. Eyer L. (Slonnie)Sloniger and Ernest K. Gann must also be included, and Louis Bleriot.
Posted by Robert Guay on September 14,2008 | 02:17PM
I thought my Dad was listed, but I can't find him. He was Theodore A. Woolsey who built the "Thunderbird" in 1926. It had several world records in it's class in 1926 -1927. Jack Frye ( a friend of his and the Pres. of TWA) flew one of the record flights, andd Clint Burrows flew the other. The plane had three models: Floco equipped, hisso equipped and ox5 equipped. He went on to many exciting and ground breaking things in aeronautical engineering, heat treating and metallurgy. I would love to see him get the recognition he so richly deserves. All his flying was in Southern California.
Posted by Kathryn Woolsey Ferguson on November 3,2008 | 02:11PM
Your list has neglected Sir Charles E. Kingsford Smith. He was already a pioneer before Lindberg and before Yeager was born. Not to take anything away from them but Sir Charles was from Australia, a vast empty country that at the time had no aviation industry and was on the opposite side of the world to those countries that did. Most will be unfamiliar with his achievements so take a quick look. He was one of the first, so therefore one of the greatest.
Posted by John Giles on January 13,2009 | 06:39AM
My father, Sgt. Ray Gutfinski, served under Jimmy Doolittle in the 432nd Bomb Squadron, 17th Bomb Group, 12th (Mediterranean) Army Air Force, in North Africa, Sardinia, and Sicily in 1943 and 1944. My father spoke in hushed tones of reverence when discussing Gen. Doolittle. Not only was Doolittle an aeronautical genius, but immensely courageous and possessing boundless humility. He would never ask a man to do something he would not do himself and often personally flew lead position in combat missions, much to the consternation of Eisenhower and other desk jockeys at S.H.A.E.F. Headquarters.
Posted by Roy C. Gutfinski on January 25,2009 | 05:08PM
How could anyone forget Charles Kingsford Smith and Amelia Earhart? I believe most children that come to this website for Information wil get... 0% in their exams, homework et cetera. EDITORS' REPLY: Amelia Earhart as a great pilot could be a controversial proposition.
Posted by Lin Yang on August 25,2009 | 09:55PM
It's cool to see Noel Wien get recognized. He's one of the main reasons Alaska is developed to the extent that it is. He pioneered aviation in extreme weather and temperature, sorting out problems associated with the cold (50 degrees below zero, about the same in Celsius and Fahrenheit), and saved lives throughout the territory. It's a shame other pilots couldn't have been on the list, but there are dozens, and only a handful of slots.
Posted by Andrew Grant on October 22,2009 | 04:07AM