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Gone West: Former DFRC Director Stanley Paul Butchart

Accomplished Research Pilot Was 85

It is with sadness Aero-News has learned Stanley Paul Butchart, a former research pilot at Edwards Air Force Base and past director of NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, died this week from complications related to old age. He was 85.

The Los Angeles Times reports Butchart flew a number of prototype aircraft at Edwards in the 1950s, as well as the B-29 motherships used to launch experimental X-1A aircraft. During one such test launch of an unmanned X-1A, Butchart was credited with jettisoning the attached rocketplane moments before it exploded -- saving his crew and aircraft. He earned the NACA Exceptional Service Medal after the incident.

In 1951, Butchart joined the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics' High-Speed Flight Research Station -- the facility that later became NASA Dryden. He became Dryden's chief test pilot in 1966; he retired from DFRC 10 years later, as director of flight operations.

Butchart was born in New Orleans in 1922. He trained as a civilian pilot before joining the Navy in 1942, where he served with future President George H.W. Bush on the USS San Jacinto, an aircraft carrier in the South Pacific. Butchart was among the attendees at the 1997 dedication of the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum at Texas A&M University.

Before becoming a test pilot, Butchart also worked briefly as an engineer at Boeing.

By his own calculations, Butchart flew 100 types of aircraft... and "soloed in everything except a hot-air balloon," according to the Times. We'd like to think now that Butchart has Gone West, where the winds are calm and the skies are clear... he's finally able to accumulate some lighter-than-air time.

FMI: www.dfrc.nasa.gov

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