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Grover Clinton Tyler

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Grover Tyler
Grover Tyler wearing the ribbon bar, above his pilot wings, to the newly received Airmail Flyers Medal of Honor
Born11 October 1892
Died2 October 1966
AwardsAirmail Flyers’ Medal of Honor

Grover Clinton Tyler (October 11, 1892 – October 2, 1966) was an aeronautical pioneer who flew as an airmail pilot in the 1920s and 1930s.

Career

Tyler is one of two pilots that started service with the Pacific Air Transport in 1926 flying along the west cost between Canada and Mexico. He is credited with flying the last leg, from Portland to Seattle, of a historic 5 leg trip between Los Angeles, CA and Seattle, Washington establishing the flight of the Pacific Coast Airways. Landing his biplane at Gorst Field he handed over the first sack of mail on this new commercial route to Postmaster C. M. Perkins on 15 September 1926. To prepare the route for night flying Tyler and fellow pilot Arthur Starbuck, the other original pilot staff of PAT, drove an old Ford up and down the San Joaquin Valley setting up airway beacon lights with a pick and shovel. By 1928 the PAT had become a unit of Boeing Systems and Tyler continued flying the mail as well as passengers on this new route he had helped to establish.[1][2][3][4]

Flight incident

On the night of March 2, 1931, while flying along the very route he had helped establish, a fire broke out on board his aircraft, a Boeing 40-B-4, and Tyler had to make an emergency landing near Roseburg, Oregon. For his actions that night President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on 29 October 1935 presented Tyler, along with 6 other pilots, with the Airmail Flyers' Medal of Honor. This very deed was later chronicled on the well known "Wheaties" cereal box as part of a 1930s era series regarding the Air Mail Flyers Medal of Honor recipients.[5][6]

Roosevelt awards the Airmail Flyers Medal of Honor to 7 pilots, with Tyler being the second from the left.

Medal citation

For extraordinary achievement while piloting air mail plane No. C-741 on the night of March 2, 1931, on a flight from Seattle, Wash. To San Diego, Calif. when about nine miles south of Glide, Oregon, about 11 p.m., Pilot Tyler discovered that smoke was coming from the underside of the plane in the vicinity of the mail compartment. The smoke was almost immediately followed by flames. The plane at the time was over a mountainous region and the nearest clearing the pilot remembered was in the vicinity of Glide. He returned to it and landed the plane in a clump of small pliant trees. The wings were caught by the trees and were torn from the body of the plane. This served to break the force of the landing so that the passengers were not seriously injured. One passenger received a few cuts about the face and another burned his hands slightly in handling a hot fire extinguisher. Pilot Tyler helped the passengers from the plane and with their assistance removed the mall load of 319 pounds from the plane. The burning pouches were thrown into the swampy ground which extinguished the fire and saved the mail except for charred edges and water damage. The fire in the mail compartment of the plane was then quenched with fire extinguishers and the water in the swampy area in which the plane landed.[7]

Death

Tyler died in 1966 just months after attending the dedication of a fountain at 5500 W. Marginal Way S. W. in Portland, Oregon marking the location of his historic landing 40 years earlier.

References

  1. ^ "The Pilot magazine". The Pilot. February 1930. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  2. ^ "Tyler at fountain dedication". 5 May 1966. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  3. ^ "15 Year anniversary of new route to Seattle". 19 August 1941. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  4. ^ "Capt. Grover Tyler delivers first mail of new Airmailroute to Seattle". 15 September 1926. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  5. ^ Tribune, Chicago (3 November 1935). "Chicago Tribune news article". Chicago Tribune. News paper. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  6. ^ Medal, Presentation. "FDR presenting Airmail Flyers Medal of Honor". Library of Congress. Harris & Ewing collection. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  7. ^ McCarty, Philip R (January 1966). "The Airmail Flyer's Medal of Honor". The Airpost Journal. 67 (1): 9–18. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)