John Armstrong Drexel

John Armstrong Drexel

Drexel in 1910
Born 24 October 1891(1891-10-24)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died 1958
Occupation Aviator
Parents Anthony Joseph Drexel II
Margarita Armstrong

John Armstrong Drexel (October 24, 1891 – 1958) was an American aviation pioneer. With William McArtle, he founded the New Forest Flying School at East Boldre, the second school for pilots in Great Britain and the fifth in the world. On August 12, 1910, he set the world altitude record of 6,750 feet in a Blériot monoplane.[1] During World War I, he flew with the French Lafayette Escadrille until 1917. He was subsequently commissioned Major in the aviation section of the U.S. Signal Service, serving until the end of the war.

Drexel was the grandson of Anthony Joseph Drexel, millionaire banker and founder of Drexel University. He was also a relative of Katharine Drexel, a nun who was later made a Roman Catholic Saint.

References

  1. ^ "Events of the Month in Aeronautics". Popular Mechanics 14: 505. October 1910.