I have met many famous pilots over the years, including several on the above list. Everyone’s definition of “Famous”, can be different though. Is it because of an achievement that they are famous, or household names, etc?Chuck Yeager, Patty Wagstaff, Robin Olds, Jim Lovell, Frank Borman, Bill Anders, Gordo Cooper, Alan Shepard, John Glenn, Wally Schirra, Bob Hoover, Al Worden, Joel Paris III, Lee Lauderback, Bud Anderson, Buzz Aldrin, Gabby Gabreski, Paul Tibbets, Gene Cernan, Dick Gordon, Robert L. Scott, Scott Crossfield, Edgar Mitchell, John Young, Joe Engle, Max Trescott, Rod Machado, Dick Truly, Pappy Boyington, Gunther Rall, Bryan Turner
Not sure if your talking about Michael Novotel Sr Medal of Honor recipient or Jr who also was a Army Helicopter Pilot and both served together in Vietnam...Senior was the WW-II B-29 pilot who the Air force did not want back on active duty so joined the Army as a warrant officer. Pappy as we all knew him as was a fixture at Ft Rucker and I considered a mentor...I was the Adjutant in his retirement ceremony and parade...close to 2500 flight school students/WOC’s and instructors spent two days practicing for a ceremony shutting down Rucker and training. Pappy spoke for over an hour in the Alabama summer heat...there was a record number of pass outs...he just kept talking...I think senior died in 2006 and JR was 3-4 years later from cancer...both were true American hero’s. After retiring Pappy would hold court most mornings with coffee at the Hardies just off post...Anyone was welcome...miss those days.Trained with Mike Novosel (MOH, B-29 Instructor, Squadron Commander & Army Dustoff pilot.) The main street at Fort Rucker is named for him.
An old Air America pilot died at 3 AM this morning in an auto accident. You may have seen the 1975 photo of him on the rooftop heliport of the Philips Hotel in Saigon. He was solo in the Air America Bell 205A1 that was evacuating civilians. Bob Caron was 88. Coincidence: The accident happened close to Mike Novosel's home in Ft Walton Beach, FL. Never met him, but I know a lot of the old fart airmen in the P'cola area.
Sorry. tried to be brief. There were three M.N.'s: Senior, Junior and the third. I trained w/ senior. He told me of his B-24 & B-29 instructor gigs. He then xfered to Tinian and then put the 29 to work. Post war, he was assigned to USAF Armament Ctr at Eglin AFB. Had repeated tours there and lived in Ft Walton near Destin. Commanded a reserve 29 Squadron. He was a LTC) He told me of one Eglin B-29 project that he worked on. Search the web for PROJECT PINBALL. P-63's. He flew DC9s for Southern A.L. until his glaucoma got too bad. Somewhere he got into the Army as a WO. Never was clear where he picked up RW quals, but he popped up in Central America flying an H-34 for S.F. (?) He the went Dustoff and did 2 tours w/ 81st Med Det(HA) in the delta. The USN Seawolfs were in the area and did ops together. Several of the Seawolfs retired and migrated to P'cola. They showed up at his 80th birthday party in Ft Walton. My wife (a CW4) and I also attended. Also, several ret. Seawolfs, one of which was running the Naval Aviation Museum at the time.Not sure if your talking about Michael Novotel Sr Medal of Honor recipient or Jr who also was a Army Helicopter Pilot and both served together in Vietnam...Senior was the WW-II B-29 pilot who the Air force did not want back on active duty so joined the Army as a warrant officer. Pappy as we all knew him as was a fixture at Ft Rucker and I considered a mentor...I was the Adjutant in his retirement ceremony and parade...close to 2500 flight school students/WOC’s and instructors spent two days practicing for a ceremony shutting down Rucker and training. Pappy spoke for over an hour in the Alabama summer heat...there was a record number of pass outs...he just kept talking...I think senior died in 2006 and JR was 3-4 years later from cancer...both were true American hero’s. After retiring Pappy would hold court most mornings with coffee at the Hardies just off post...Anyone was welcome...miss those days.
Some to varying degrees of fame, but the one that got the most sincere “It’s a true honor to meet you” was Sir Frank Whittle.
I met, talked with, and drove with him to the Hamilton Airport to view his DGA 11.............Amelia Earhart's flight instructor...Hugh Rueschenberg.
It really makes you realize how young powered flight actually is.....
Not the first airplane he jumped out of prior to impact.Jim Bob Slocum. He flew the 727 and bailed out for the Discovery Channel show about 10 years ago.
It really makes you realize how young powered flight actually is when we can be contemporary with some of aviation's pioneers.
I have been a licensed pilot for 47% of the history of aviation since Kitty Hawk. You'd think I'd get it right by now.....and how old some of us are!
I had seen the front page of Stars & Stripes w/the pic of senior and junior in an 81st Dustoff Huey cockpit. One day senior was shot down and rescued by junior. Couple days later it was reversed. True story.
I mentioned that he left his airline gig with claucoma. Must have convinced an army flight surgeon to approve him because they had plenty of eye drops. Back in the states, I was chatting with my commander who was flying with Mike in the 81st. He told me that Mike scared the @&%# out him. He said they had just loaded up with wounded and the bullets hitting the ship were getting louder. "Hoss" looked over at Mike as he was carefully putting drops in his eyes. Said " OK, now I can see the tree line barrier, lets go."I remember reading it. Nobody could make up story like that. In fact, the Novosel life story reads like an out-there Rambo movie. B-29s? Back in a plodding helicopter in Vietnam because he wanted to? Son doing the same thing?
Had the good fortune to meet the senior Novosel at a Quad A convention and shake his hand. A career highlight. That Medal of Honor looks impressive close up.
This is kind of a weird list we have going on.:
The bravest of them all: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Thompson_Jr.This is Memorial day and I have to mention a pilot I used to know. Hugh "Buck" Thompson came to work at the same place that I was working. He flew a Jetranger in the energy industry south of Houma/Lafayette, LA, his home town. He passed through my base daily. I helped him out one stinking weather day when his fuel tank had become filled with air. I took the mike from the FF radio operator and gave him a little help finding a fuel location near his position. You may recall his actions back in 1968 when he landed between troops and local villagers at a town called My Lai. He was flying a military Hiller 12 with two other crew. They were armed with a single machine gun. He kept the peace until a medevac helicopter arrived. He left aviation to serve with the VA as a counsellor. He died of cancer in 2006.
I at least recognize a majority of the names brought into the thread. That I haven't met any of them tells me I need to get out more. OK, I did meet Rod Machado once, but he was signing a book I bought at an AOPA convention, so it was more of a commercial transaction than a social one.
I did spend a lot of time talking aviation with Livingston Taylor once, though he's better known as a musician than a pilot. He flew a 206 based on Martha's Vineyard, as I recall. We were at a new student reception for the Berklee College of Music, where my son was enrolled and he was adjunct faculty. He was supposed to be chatting up the incoming freshmen, but was so enthusiastic about aviation that he spent most of the night talking to me, even after the organizers, repeatedly, dragged him away to talk to students.
Only a pilot could write these lyrics ...I did spend a lot of time talking aviation with Livingston Taylor once, though he's better known as a musician than a pilot.