Pierre Deley
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Pierre Deley (born 1 November 1893 in Marseillan, France) was one of the pioneering pilots for the Aéropostale (aviation) company.
He was the grand nephew and godson of another Marseillan native, Pierre Auguste Roques, the founder of French military aviation.
He obtained his fighter pilot's licence in 1917 and finished World War I with six aerial victories. He joined the Pierre-Georges Latécoère's Lignes Aériennes Latécoère company (later to become Aéropostale) in 1923, rubbing shoulders with, among others, Didier Daurat, Jean Mermoz, Henri Guillaumet and Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.
After Mermoz and Guillaumet, he was the third pilot to cross the Andes, eventually doing so more than 150 times. When Guillaumet disappeared in the Andes, Deley was on of the pilots who searched for him before he was eventually rescued.
He created and managed the airport at Port-Étienne, then became station chief at Santiago airport, Chile.
He was transferred to Air France in 1933 following the company's creation, and posted to Buenos Aires, becoming the company's representative for Argentina and Chile.
He died on 27 February 1981, in his home town of Marseillan.
[edit] Film
The 1995 IMAX film Wings of Courage (director: Jean-Jacques Annaud) traced the career of Guillaumet. The part of Pierre Deley was played by Ken Pogue.
[edit] Further reading
Marseillan author, René Angel, has wrtten a biography: Pierre Deley, pionnier de l'Aéropostale. (Editions Loubatières 2004)
[edit] External link
- Biography on the Latécoère site. (French)
- This article was initially translated from this Wikipedia article « fr:Pierre Deley » , specifically from this version.