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Along with the P-38, the U-2, and the SR-71, Tony LeVier was one of Lockheed’s most prized legends. LeVier cut his teeth on air racing and placed second in the 1939 Thompson Trophy Race. The next year he was hired as a test pilot by General Motors; then he moved to Lockheed.
LeVier flight-tested the P-38 Lightning to the ragged edges of its envelope and was sent to England to teach Eighth Air Force pilots how to get the most out of it. On one harrowing flight, in a 60-degree dive at over 500 mph initiated at 35,000 feet, the airplane started to nose over; LeVier hauled back on the stick, trying to maintain dive angle. What saved him were dive-recovery flaps that engineers had just installed to prevent this very problem. At 13,000 feet, LeVier slowly regained control. “My strain gauges were set for 100 percent of limit load,” he reported in Test Pilots by Richard Hallion, “and they were all over 100 and all the red warning lights were on when I finally got out of the dive.”
Next up: the XP-80A, the nation’s first operational jet fighter. In 1945, by which time he was Lockheed’s chief test pilot, an XP-80’s turbine disintegrated and took the tail off the airplane. LeVier bailed out and crushed two vertebrae upon landing, an injury that grounded him for six months. He later called it “the most horrifying experience of my whole flying career.”
After World War II ended, LeVier worked with the model 75 Saturn and XR60-1 Constitution transports, and on the side bought a P-38 and got back into air racing. In 1946 he again placed second in the Thompson race. LeVier was the first to fly the XF-90, the YF-94 Starfire, the XF-104 Starfighter, and the U-2. (In Kelly: More Than My Share of It All, Lockheed designer Kelly Johnson recounts that when LeVier first saw the F-104, he asked, “Where are the wings?”—a question a great many others at least wondered about.) In 1950 he piloted the first Lockheed aircraft to surpass Mach 1, an F-90, which he dove at an angle of 60 degrees to reach 900 mph. When LeVier retired in 1974, he had made the first flights of 20 aircraft, had flown some 240 types of aircraft, and had survived eight crashes and a mid-air collision.
9. Jean Mermoz
In January 1921, on his third try, Jean Mermoz got his pilot’s license. Three years later, he signed up as a pilot with Lignes Aeriennes Latécoère, and set out to attain the goal of aircraft designer Pierre Latécoère: to create an airmail line linking Europe with Africa and South America.
In 1926, Mermoz had engine trouble over the Mauritanian desert and made an emergency landing. He was captured by nomadic Moors and held prisoner until a ransom was paid—a common practice and one of the many torments on the Latécoère airmail routes, which linked Toulouse to Barcelona, Casablanca, and Dakar. Mermoz was lucky—five Latécoère pilots were killed by Moors. Other hazards: the hostile Sahara, impenetrable Andes, and 150-mph winds that roiled over the southern Argentine coast.
In 1927, Lignes Aeriennes Latécoère became Compagnie Général Aéropostale, and Mermoz took charge of the South American routes. He made Aéropostale’s first South American night flight in April 1928 from Natal in Brazil to Buenos Aires in Argentina, along a route unmarked by any sort of beacon. After he showed the way, mail delivery was no longer restricted to daylight-only operations.
Mermoz next tackled shortening the Argentina-to-Chile route; pilots had to make a thousand-mile detour to get around the Andes. With mechanic Alexandre Collenot, Mermoz set out in a Latécoère 25 monoplane and found an updraft that carried them through a mountain pass, but a downdraft smashed the aircraft onto a plateau at 12,000 feet. After determining that they could not hike out, Mermoz cleared a crude path to the edge of the precipice and removed from the aircraft anything that wasn’t bolted down. He and Collenot strapped themselves in, and Mermoz got the airplane rolling down the path. In effect, they dove off the mountain, and Mermoz pointed the nose straight down, hoping to gain flying speed. Again, luck was with him. And in July 1929, with the acquisition of Potez 25 open-cockpit biplanes that had a much higher ceiling than the Laté 25, Mermoz and Henry Guillaumet opened a scheduled route between Buenos Aires and Santiago.


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