- John H. Griffith
John H. Griffith was a
test pilot for theNational Advisory Committee for Aeronautics , one of the pilots of theBell X-1 .Griffith grew up in
Homewood, Illinois . He joined theUnited States Army Air Corps in November 1941, and served in the South Pacific duringWorld War II . He flew 189 missions in theCurtiss P-40 fighter and was awarded two Distinguished Flying Crosses and fourAir Medal s.Following the war, he attended
Purdue University , studying aeronautical engineering. He then joined the NACA's Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory. At Lewis he was involved in tests oframjet aircraft. In August, 1949, Griffith became a research pilot at the Muroc Flight Test Unit (now Dryden Flight Research Center). He flew the experimental aircraft the Bell X-1 (nine flights),X-4 Bantam (three flights),Douglas Skystreak (fifteen flights), andDouglas Skyrocket (nine flights). He was the first NACA pilot to fly the X-4.Griffith left the NACA in 1950 to fly for private companies — Chance Vought,
United Airlines , and for Westinghouse. At Vought, in 1951, he was the Senior Experimental Pilot on theF7U Cutlass . At Westinghouse, he became the Chief Engineering Test Pilot. He later worked for theFederal Aviation Administration , assisting in the development of a never-completed supersonic transport plane. He subsequently returned to United Airlines as a flight instructor, until retiring toPenn Valley, California .Griffith is one of the 2006 inductees into the
Lancaster, California Aerospace Walk of Honor References
*cite web|url=http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Photo/Pilots/HTML/E50-382.html|title=Research pilot John Griffith|author=NASA Dryden Flight Research Center
*"City of Lancaster Outlook", August 2006.
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