Octave Chanute Award
This award was created in early 1902 by the Western Society of Engineers for papers of merit on engineering innovations. It is still awarded as of 2011. The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc. (AIAA) introduced the "Chanute Flight Award" in 1939; it was presented for an outstanding contribution made by a pilot or test personnel to the advancement of the art, science, and technology of aeronautics. This award was discontinued in 2005.
Self taught
Octave Chanute, 1832–1910, was born in France and became a naturalized American. He was a self-taught engineer. He designed the first railroad bridge over the Missouri River and the Union Stock Yards in Chicago (IL) as well as those in Kansas City (MO). Octave Chanute was a pioneer aeronautical engineer and experimenter, and was a friend and adviser to the Wright Brothers.
Aeronautical pioneer
Chanute waged a long campaign to encourage the invention of the airplane. He collected information from every possible source and gave it to anyone who asked. He published a compendium of aviation information in 1894. In 1896 he commissioned several aircraft to be built. The Katydid had multiple wings that could be attached variously about the fuselage for ease of experimentation. Chanute's biplane glider (1896) with "two arched wings held rigidly together by vertical struts and diagonal wire bracing" (the principle of the Pratt truss used in the railroad bridges which Chanute constructed) served as a prototype design for subsequent airplanes.
Recognition
He is universally recognized as a prominent engineer, experimenter, writer and communicator, which is why these two award were given his name.
The former Chanute AFB in Illinois was named in honor of him, and so was the town of Chanute, KS
Some Chanute Flight Award Recipients
- 1940 Howard Hughes, Engineer, Pilot
- 1955 Albert Boyd, pioneering test pilot
- 1957 Frank Kendall Everest, Jr, test pilot
- 1967 Milton O. Thompson, NASA Director of Research
- 1968 William J. Knight, Test pilot, Astronaut, Record setter
- 1954 Albert Scott Crossfield, Test pilot, Astronaut
- 1957 Brig. Gen. Frank Kendall "Pete" Everest, Jr., USAF
- 1962 Neil Alden Armstrong, Astronaut
- John Leonard (Jack) Swigert, Jr. Astronaut (Apollo 13 crewman)
- Charles N Haas, Environmental Engineer
- 1965 Alvin S. White, Test pilot
- 1949 VADM Frederick M. Trapnell, pioneering naval aviator and test pilot
- 1960 Joseph John "Tym" Tymczyszyn, Test Pilot
- 1986 George Jansen [1]
See also
- Aviation history#Picking up the pace
References
External links
- Western Society of Engineers
- Octave Chanute—A champion of aviation
- Locomotive to Aeromotive – Octave Chanute and the Transportation Revolution, by Simine Short. University of Illinois Press (August 2011)