Howard Hughes' Top Ten
Wealthy beyond measure and weird beyond belief, Howard Hughes was an aerospace leviathan.
- By Preston Lerner
- Air & Space magazine, November 2004
Hughes’ first record-setter was a Boeing 100A, a civilian version of the Army’s P-12B pursuit aircraft. In January 1934 Hughes won the Sportsman Pilot Free-For-All at the Miami, Florida All- American Air Meet, averaging 185.7 mph over a 20-mile course.
Chas. E. Bulloch/NASM (SI Neg. #81-16961)
WEALTHY BEYOND MEASURE AND WEIRD BEYOND BELIEF, HOWARD HUGHES WAS a daredevil sportsman, legendary Lothario, Hollywood producer, Las Vegas mogul, and aerospace leviathan, a composite of myth and melodrama. No wonder he has inspired a cottage industry of biographies, memoirs, novels, and movies.
The latest Hughes biopic, directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, is titled The Aviator, which may seem surprising to all but aviation enthusiasts. Although Hughes is remembered these days mostly for a pathological late-life fear of germs, he was once world-renowned as a record-setting pilot, a patron of pioneering aircraft, and a principal architect of the airline industry.
"Howard loved the drama of flying," says Robert W. Rummel, who worked with Hughes as a young engineer and later as a TWA executive. "He was an outstanding pilot, and in the cockpit, he seemed to exult in the freedom of flight. Of course, he was an astute businessman, and making money was one of the things that motivated him. But he had a sincere and abiding interest in aviation, and I think it was his one and only true love."
Hughes owned countless aircraft, which he stashed all over the country and flew whenever he felt like it'or not at all. The following are the ones that played the most significant roles in Hughes' aviation affairs.
The Blue Streak Hughes went into the airplane business in 1934. At 28, he'd already produced and directed Hell's Angels, a film epic about World War I aerial combat, and he'd recently set a national speed record and won a race in a highly modified Boeing 100A biplane. Now he assembled a small team of employees into what would eventually become the Hughes Aircraft Company and embarked on the project that anchored his place in aviation history.
The company's first creation, the H-1, the 1B, or, his preference, simply the Racer, coupled noble proportions and graceful styling with leading-edge technology'many prop-heads call it the most beautiful airplane ever built. "The H-1 was an extraordinarily advanced example of what we would call a technology demonstrator," says aerospace historian Richard P. Hallion. "Monocoque stressed skin, flush rivets, hydraulic landing gear, and so on'for a guy who was just coming out of the box, if you will, it's a remarkable achievement."
Hughes harnessed the 1,000 horsepower of a Pratt & Whitney Twin Wasp Junior to set an international speed record of 352 mph in 1935 before making a gear-up landing in a bean field. In 1937, fitted with longer wings, the Racer took Hughes from coast to coast in seven hours, 28 minutes, breaking the transcontinental record he'd set the previous year in a Northrop Gamma. Hughes never flew the H-1 again. It was retired to a Quonset hut in Southern California after a mere 42 hours of flight time.
In 1975, Hughes had the Racer restored and trucked to the National Air and Space Museum, where it resides today. In 1998, a cadre of enthusiasts led by Jim Wright of Cottage Grove, Oregon, arrived in Washington, D.C., to take detailed measurements of the Racer. With that data, Wright and company reverse-engineered a replica that was the world's most ambitious homebuilt (see "Silver Bullet," Apr./May 2003). In 2002, Wright set a new speed record with it. Tragically, he was killed and his replica destroyed when he crashed in Yellowstone National Park last year.





Comments (6)
The world we live in today miss Mr. Howard Hughes. His Idea's ,his go get it way,or get it done way.What America needs today is more top businessmen & Women to step up to the plate like Mr. Hughes did.God know ,I Know that we all
miss Mr. Howard Hughes.
Timothy J. Irby
MCBD Pro Int.
PD Publishing 2009
Posted by Timothy J. Irby on January 3,2009 | 01:24 AM
His Genius has been purposely downplayed and often ridiculed because of the fact that his technologies and developments were to become the foundations of what we now have in Aeropspace, Global Communications, Health Research and even, yes, Espionage. It will undoubtedly be told what his true impact has been on this great nation once time has elapsed to the point where it will make little difference to know what the real truth is.
I certainly agree with the above comment!
Posted by djt on January 19,2009 | 09:43 PM
I am looking for a list of avaiation "collectors" - and was hoping that someone could point me in the right direction. I have items related to Mr. Hughes that I would like to auction.
Thanks...
Posted by k.durkin on May 13,2009 | 02:53 AM
In regards to the above items, please contact me. I may be interested in what you may have. Thanks. craventim@yahoo.com
Posted by Tim Craven on May 18,2009 | 01:37 AM
Mr. Hughes was a genius with great muti-skills. I was very impressed with his accomplishments. It took a lot of get up and go power to have done one forth of the things he did. He was incredibly gifted.
Posted by Wanda Goree on April 19,2012 | 08:28 PM
If it was not for men like Mr. Hughes we would be still riding a horse and buggy.
Posted by william babiak on December 23,2012 | 08:02 PM