Chuck Yeager, Test Pilot
Who Broke the Sound Barrier, Is Dead at 97
A World War II fighter ace and Air Force general,
he was, according to Tom Wolfe, “the most righteous of all the possessors of
the right stuff.”
Chuck Yeager in
1948. The previous year, he became the first pilot to break the sound barrier.Credit...Associated Press
Chuck
Yeager, the most famous test pilot of his generation, who was the first to
break the sound barrier and, thanks to Tom Wolfe, came to personify the
death-defying aviator who possessed the elusive yet unmistakable “right stuff,”
died on Monday in Los Angeles. He was 97.
His death,
at a hospital, was announced on his official Twitter
account and confirmed by John Nicoletti, a family friend.
General
Yeager came out of the West Virginia hills with only a high school education
and with a drawl that left many a fellow pilot bewildered. The first time he
went up in a plane, he was sick to his stomach.
But he became a fighter ace in World War II, shooting down five German planes in a single day and 13 over all. In the decade that followed, he helped usher in the age of military jets and spaceflight. He flew more than 150 military aircraft, logging more than 10,000 hours in the air.
His signal
achievement came on Oct. 14, 1947, when he climbed out of a B-29 bomber as it
ascended over the Mojave Desert in California and entered the cockpit of an
orange, bullet-shaped, rocket-powered experimental plane attached to the bomb
bay.
An Air
Force captain at the time, he zoomed off in the plane, a Bell Aircraft X-1, at
an altitude of 23,000 feet, and when he reached about 43,000 feet above the
desert, history’s first sonic boom reverberated across the floor of the dry
lake beds. He had reached a speed of 700 miles an hour, breaking the sound
barrier and dispelling the long-held fear that any plane flying at or beyond
the speed of sound would be torn apart by shock waves.
“After all
the anticipation to achieve this moment, it really was a letdown,” General
Yeager wrote in his best-selling memoir “Yeager”
(1985, with Leo Janos). “There should’ve been a bump in the road, something to
let you know that you had just punched a nice, clean hole through the sonic
barrier. The Ughknown was a poke through Jell-O. Later on, I realized that this
mission had to end in a letdown because the real barrier wasn’t in the sky but
in our knowledge and experience of supersonic flight.”
Nonetheless, the exploit ranked alongside the
Wright brothers’ first flight at Kitty Hawk in 1903 and Charles Lindbergh’s
solo fight to Paris in 1927 as epic events in the history of aviation. In 1950,
General Yeager’s X-1 plane, which he christened Glamorous Glennis, honoring his
wife, went on display at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.
Image
General
Yeager, center, in front of his P-51 Mustang with his ground crew when he
was an Air Force fighter pilot in Europe.Credit...Courtesy of Chuck Yeager
His feat put General Yeager in the headlines for a
time, but he truly became a national celebrity only after the publication of
Mr. Wolfe’s book “The Right Stuff” in 1979, about the early days of the space
program, and the release of the movie based on it four years later, in which
General Yeager was played by Sam Shepard. He was depicted breaking the
sound barrier in the opening scene.
In his
portrayal of the astronauts of NASA’s Mercury program, Mr. Wolfe wrote about the
post-World War II test pilot fraternity in California’s desert and its notion
that “a man should have the ability to go up in a hurtling piece of machinery
and put his hide on the line and then have the moxie, the reflexes, the
experience, the coolness to pull it back in the last yawning moment — and then
go up again the next day, and the next day, and every next day.”
That
quality, understood but unspoken, Mr. Wolfe added, would entitle a pilot to be
part of “the very Brotherhood of the Right Stuff itself.”
Mr. Wolfe wrote about a nonchalance affected by pilots in the face of an emergency in a voice “specifically Appalachian in origin,” one that was first heard in military circles but ultimately emanated from the cockpits of commercial airliners.
“It was,”
Mr. Wolfe said, “the drawl of the most righteous of all the possessors of the
right stuff: Chuck Yeager.”
In his
memoir, General Yeager said he was annoyed when people asked him if he had the
right stuff, since he felt it implied a talent he was born with.
“All I know is I worked my tail off learning to
learn how to fly, and worked hard at it all the way,” he wrote. “If there is
such a thing as the right stuff in piloting, then it is experience. The secret
to my success was that somehow I always managed to live to fly another day.”
Charles Elwood Yeager was born on Feb. 13, 1923,
in Myra, W. Va., the second of five children of Albert and Susie Mae (Sizemore)
Yeager. He grew up in nearby Hamlin, a town of about 400, where his father
drilled for natural gas in the coal fields. By the time he was 6, Chuck was
shooting squirrels and rabbits and skinning them for family dinners, reveling
in a country boy’s life.
The
actor Sam Shepard, left, and General Yeager on the set of the 1983 film “The
Right Stuff,” in which Mr. Shepard played General Yeager.Credit...Warner Bros.
He enlisted in the Army Air Forces out of high school in September 1941, becoming an airplane mechanic. One day he took a ride with a maintenance officer flight-testing a plane he had serviced and promptly threw up over the back seat. But he joined a flight program for enlisted men in July 1942, figuring it would get him out of kitchen detail and guard duty. He received his pilot wings and appointment as a flight officer in March 1943 while at Luke Field in Arizona, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant after arriving in England for training.
In 2016,
when General Yeager was asked on Twitter what made him want to become a pilot,
the reply was infused with cheeky levity: “I was in maintenance, saw pilots had
beautiful girls on their arms, didn’t have dirty hands, so I applied.”
He
possessed a natural coordination and aptitude for understanding an airplane’s
mechanical system along with coolness under pressure. He enjoyed spins and
dives and loved staging mock dogfights with his fellow trainees.
He flew P-51 Mustang fighters in the European theater
during World War II, and in March 1944, on his eighth mission, he was shot down
over France by a German fighter plane and parachuted into woods with leg and
head wounds. But he was hidden by members of the French underground, made it to
neutral Spain by climbing the snowy Pyrenees, carrying a severely wounded flier
with him, and returned to his base in England.
Downed pilots were not generally put back into
combat, but his pleas to see action again were granted. On Oct. 12, 1944,
leading three fighter squadrons escorting bombers over Bremen, Germany, he
downed five German planes, becoming an ace in a day. In November, he shot down
another four planes in one day.
After the
war, General Yeager was assigned to Muroc Army Air Base in California, where
hot-shot pilots were testing jet prototypes. He was chosen over more senior
pilots to fly the Bell X-1 in a quest to break the sound barrier, and when he
set out to do it, he could barely move, having broken two ribs a couple of
nights earlier when he crashed into a fence while racing with his wife on horseback
in the desert.
The Air
Force kept the feat a secret, an outgrowth of the Cold War with the Soviet
Union, but in December 1947, Aviation Week magazine revealed that the sound
barrier had been broken; the Air Force finally acknowledged it in June 1948.
But life
continued much the same at Muroc. The pilots and their families had quarters
little better than shacks, the days were scorching and the nights frigid, and
the landscape was barren. The pilots flew by day and caroused by night, piling
into the Pancho Barnes bar.
In December 1949, Muroc was renamed Edwards Air
Force Base, and it became a center for advanced aviation research leading to
the space program. In December 1953, General Yeager flew the X-1A plane at
nearly two and a half times the speed of sound after barely surviving a spin,
setting a world speed record.
General
Yeager broke the sound barrier again in an F-15D on the 50th anniversary of his
historic flight in 1997.Credit...Michael
Caulfield/Associated Press
In the fall
of 1953, he was dispatched to an air base on Okinawa in the Pacific to test a
MiG-15 Russian-built fighter that had been flown into American hands by a North
Korean defector. Battling stormy weather as he took the plane aloft, he
analyzed its strengths and weaknesses. In 1962, he became commander of the
school at Edwards that trained prospective astronauts.
He commanded a fighter wing during the Vietnam War
while holding the rank of colonel and flew 127 missions, mainly piloting Martin
B-57 light bombers in attacking enemy troops and their supplies along the Ho
Chi Minh Trail.
After
serving as head of aerospace safety for the Air Force, he retired as a
brigadier general in 1975. His decorations included the Distinguished Service
Medal, the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit, the Distinguished Flying Cross and
the Bronze Star. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s
highest civilian award, from President Ronald Reagan in 1985.
NASA’s
administrator, Jim Bridenstine, described General Yeager’s death in a statement as
“a tremendous loss to our nation.” The astronaut Scott Kelly, writing on
Twitter, called him “a true legend.”
General Yeager became a familiar face in
commercials and made numerous public appearances.
Flying F-15 planes, he broke the sound barrier again on the 50th and 55th
anniversaries of his pioneering flight, and he was a passenger on an F-15 plane
in another breaking of the sound barrier to commemorate the 65th anniversary.
General
Yeager preparing to board an F-15D Eagle in 2012.Credit...Master Sgt. Jason W. Edwards/Agence
France-Presse, via U.S. Air Force and Getty Images
His first
wife, the former Glennis Dickhouse, with whom he had four children, died in
1990. He married Victoria D’Angelo in 2003. He is survived by his wife; two
daughters, Susan Yeager and Sharon Yeager Flick; and a son, Don. Another
son, Michael, died in 2011.
In his
memoir, General Yeager wrote that through all his years as a pilot, he had made
sure to “learn everything I could about my airplane and my emergency
equipment.”
It may not
have accorded with his image, but, as he told it: “I was always afraid of
dying. Always.”
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