103 Years — A Lifetime And An Era In Flight

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Key Takeaways:

  • Ralph Charles, one of the country's oldest pilots, passed away at 103, having started his aviation journey working with the Wright brothers as a welder.
  • His extensive career included running his own airport, flying for airlines like TWA in the 1930s, and serving as a test pilot for Curtiss-Wright during World War II.
  • After a multi-year hiatus, Charles resumed flying in 1995, owning an Aeronca Defender, and continued to fly until 2001.
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Ralph Charles, one of the country’s oldest pilots, died Feb. 2 at age 103, in Somerset, Ohio. In his youth he worked with the Wright brothers as a welder. He later ran his own airport, and in the 1930s he flew Stinsons and Ford Tri-Motors for TWA and other airlines. During World War II, Charles flew as a test pilot for Curtiss-Wright. After the war, he gave up flying for many years, but never lost his passion for it. “Sometimes when I would mow, I would imagine my tractor was a plane and I was rising up into the sky,” he told the Associated Press in a 1999 interview. He took up flying again in 1995, and owned an Aeronca Defender. He last flew in the summer of 2001.

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