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Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
12-08-2020, 08:41 AM
Chuck Yeager, pilot who broke the sound barrier, dies at 97
By Pete Muntean, Hollie Silverman and Joe Sutton, CNN

CNN logo

Chuck Yeager, pilot who broke the sound barrier, dies at 97

US Air Force officer and test pilot Chuck Yeager, known as "the fastest man alive," has died at the age of 97.

Chuck Yeager wearing a hat: Chuck Yeager in 1997.© Klim Kulish/Corbis/Getty Images Chuck Yeager in 1997.
a man wearing a suit and tie: President Ronald Reagan presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award, to Chuck Yeager at a White House luncheon in 1985.© Bettmann Archive/Getty Images President Ronald Reagan presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award, to Chuck Yeager at a White House luncheon in 1985.
Yeager broke the sound barrier when he tested the X-1 in October 1947, although the feat was not announced to the public until 1948.

a vintage photo of a man standing next to a plane: Captain Chuck Yeager besides the Bell X-1 in 1949.© Bettman Archive/Getty Images Captain Chuck Yeager besides the Bell X-1 in 1949.
His second wife, Victoria, confirmed to CNN Monday night that Yeager had passed after she tweeted from Yeager's verified Twitter account that the World War II flying ace had died.

Wolfgang von Gronau, Vladimir Komarov, Jacqueline Cochran posing for a photo: Chuck Yeager received the Silver Chain for Pioneers of the Windrose in Munich in 1965.© Klaus Frings/AP Chuck Yeager received the Silver Chain for Pioneers of the Windrose in Munich in 1965.
"An incredible life well lived, America's greatest pilot," she tweeted.

a man standing in front of a crowd: Chuck Yeager was honored during the MLB baseball game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Colorado Rockies on June 14, 2018 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia.© Andy Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Chuck Yeager was honored during the MLB baseball game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Colorado Rockies on June 14, 2018 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia.
His legacy captured later generations as well, being featured in the book and 1983 film, "The Right Stuff."

Chuck Yeager wearing a suit and tie: Susie Yeager plants a kiss on the cheek of her supersonic son, Brig. Gen. Chuck Yeager in1973.© Associated Press Susie Yeager plants a kiss on the cheek of her supersonic son, Brig. Gen. Chuck Yeager in1973.
"This is a sad day for America," John Nicoletti, Yeager's friend and ground crew chief, told CNN Monday night. "After he broke the sound barrier, we all now have permission to break barriers."


Nicoletti said Yeager had gone through some physical challenges in recent years and had a fall that led to complications and other issues due to his age.

Yeager resided in Northern California but died in a Los Angeles hospital, Nicoletti said.

"Yeager was never a quitter," Nicoletti recalled of his friend. "He was an incredibly courageous man."

Time at war
Born in 1923 and raised in West Virginia, Yeager enlisted in the Army Air Corps at age 18 in 1941, according to his website.

In 1943, Yeager was commissioned a reserve flight officer before becoming a pilot in the fighter command of the Eight Air Force stationed in England.

Over the course of World War II, he flew 64 missions and shot down 13 German planes, according to his biography on Britannica.

"Many didn't make it through World War II. Most didn't make it through the early days of test piloting," friend Nicoletti explained. "The odds of survival for Chuck were as narrow as the odds of America gaining its own freedom."

Yeager was shot down over France in March of 1944 on his eighth combat mission but was able to evade capture with the help of the French underground, his website said.

He returned to the US in 1945 and married his wife Glennis, for whom he had named several of his fighting aircraft.

Ascent to breaking the barrier
Following the war, Yeager became a flight instructor and a test pilot, working as an assistant maintenance officer in the Fighter Section of the Flight Test Division at Wright Field in Ohio.

Yeager's exceptional skills were quickly recognized, and he was asked to perform in airshows as well as service trials for new planes, according to his website.

In 1946, Col. Albert Boyd was chief of the Flight Test Division and hand selected Yeager to be a student at the new test pilot school at Wright Field.

While he had only a high school education, Yeager credited his success in the program to his flying abilities.

Col. Boyd chose Yeager to be the first to fly the rocket-powered Bell X-1. "He chose Yeager because he considered him the best 'instinctive' pilot he had ever seen and he had demonstrated an extraordinary capacity to remain calm and focused in stressful situations," Yeager's website explained.

After months of flights with the X-1, Yeager broke the sound barrier with his aircraft, which he named the Glamorous Glennis on October 14, 1947, over Rogers Dry Lake in Southern California.

The X-1 reached Mach 1.06 or 700 mph, making Yeager the first man to travel faster than the speed of sound and earning him the title of "Fastest Man Alive."

Setting more records
Yeager spent the following years continuing to test aircraft and pushing the limits, setting the speed record for a straight wing aircraft of Mach 2.44, December of 1953.

Yeager was awarded the 1953 Harmon International Trophy by President Dwight D. Eisenhower for breaking the record.

He then returned to operational flying in 1954, taking over command of the 417th Fighter Bomber Squadron and being stationed at Hahn Air Base in Germany, and then at Toul-Rosières Air Base in France.

In 1957, Yeager returned to California and took over command of the 1st Fighter Day Squadron at George AFB, according to his website.

He became commandant of the Aerospace Research Pilot School with the rank of colonel in 1962. There, he "presided over the development of a first of its kind institution designed to prepare US military test pilots for spaceflight," according to his website.

Thirty-seven graduates of that program were selected for the US space program, with 26 earning astronaut's wings flying in the Gemini, Apollo and Space Shuttle programs, the website said.

Throughout the 1960's, his position in the Air Force took him to the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand and Korea.

Yeager retired from the Air Force with the rank of Brigadier General in 1975, having flown 10,131.6 hours in some 361 different types and models of military aircraft over the course of his career, according to the website.

After retiring
While his official service was over, Yeager continued to be a valued adviser for government and aerospace industry, his website said.

Yeager was one of several people featured in the 1983 film, "The Right Stuff," adapted from Tom Wolfe's nonfiction novel about the first 15 years of America's space program.

In 1997, at age 74, Yeager commemorated the 50th anniversary of his milestone flight in the X-1, by flying in an F-15 Eagle.

"General Yeager represents the best of us. For me, Chuck Yeager will always be the sound of freedom," his friend Nicoletti told CNN.

Correction: An earlier version of this story gave the wrong military branch that Chuck Yeager joined. Yeager enlisted in the Army Air Corps. The US Air Force was formed in 1947.

Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
12-08-2020, 08:45 AM
97 years is a long life.
Seems he accomplished so much and served his country with courage, honor, distinction and class...--Tyr

NightTrain
12-08-2020, 07:43 PM
He was a true American hero.

If you ever want to read a fascinating book, read his Autobiography. I've read it probably a dozen times over the years.

When he was shot down in his Mustang in WWII, he made it over the Alps and eventually made it back to England. The rules were that a pilot that made it back was forbidden to fly any more combat missions for fear that if he were shot down again, the Nazis would torture the pilot until giving up the resistance network assisting downed pilots and they'd all be exterminated.

Yeager didn't want to go home, he wanted to fight. He took it all the way to the top and finally Eisenhower himself gave him a waiver to remain in theatre and fight.

He flew all of the hottest jets in the Golden Era of jet aviation. He led a remarkable life.

RIP, General.

Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
12-08-2020, 09:34 PM
He was a true American hero.

If you ever want to read a fascinating book, read his Autobiography. I've read it probably a dozen times over the years.

When he was shot down in his Mustang in WWII, he made it over the Alps and eventually made it back to England. The rules were that a pilot that made it back was forbidden to fly any more combat missions for fear that if he were shot down again, the Nazis would torture the pilot until giving up the resistance network assisting downed pilots and they'd all be exterminated.

Yeager didn't want to go home, he wanted to fight. He took it all the way to the top and finally Eisenhower himself gave him a waiver to remain in theatre and fight.

He flew all of the hottest jets in the Golden Era of jet aviation. He led a remarkable life.

RIP, General.

YET THIS NATION HAS A WANT --TO BE -- PRESIDENT-- WORTHLESS CORRUPT SCUM LIKE BIDEN SUPPOSEDLY ELECTED BY THE PEOPLE.

Something is going to have to give or else we as a nation will soon be a socialist hellhole..

Biden- same as was-- the traitor obama-- is not and never ever will be my President.
I swear no loyalty to ffing traitors--and they both are just that, imho..-Tyr

jimnyc
12-09-2020, 12:37 PM
One of those guys that truly made you proud to be an American. :saluting2:

RIP Mr. Yeager :(