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Flight Instructor

Hall of Fame

Highlighting the important role flight instructors play as a foundation for the safety of the entire national air transportation system.

Mary Latimer
Mary Latimer

Congratulations to

Mary Latimer

for being named the 2025 Flight Instructor Hall of Fame Inductee!

The Flight Instructor Hall of Fame in 2025 inducted Mary Latimer, a flight instructor and educator from Texas. Latimer first soloed in 1972, and had her commercial, CFI, and A&P certificates. She has been an IA since 1977 and an ATP since 1981. She also served as an air traffic controller at Lawton, Oklahoma, and Fort Worth Meacham from 1976 to 2002. Latimer was a designated pilot examiner, conducting at least 600 check rides between 2009 and 2017. Mary started the GIFT (Girls in Flight Training) Academy to promote aviation to women in aviation, to show support, and to encourage participation.

In receiving the honor, Latimer reflected on her inspiration. “When I was in high school a number of decades ago, our alma mater had one line that said, “Send my sons and daughters to stand beside immortals.” And I feel like maybe a small part of me has achieved that. I am standing beside immortals as I hold this Hall of Fame trophy, and 60 years ago those words were impossible to imagine.”

What is the Flight Instructor Hall of Fame (HOF)?

Its purpose is to recognize those individuals who have made significant contributions to aviation education and flight instruction while reflecting credit upon themselves and their profession. It highlights the important role flight instructors play as a foundation for the safety of the entire national air transportation system. Each year (with limited exceptions), one or more inductees are selected and honored.

NAFI sponsors and administers the HOF: NAFI recruits applicant inductees each year, organizes the independent judging panel, administers the results of the judging selection, covers the costs of administering the award, and provides the venue for the induction ceremony each year the award takes place.

Apply for the Instructor Hall of Fame today.

Flight Instructor Hall of Fame

Selection Criteria:

Candidates will be judged on their contributions to aviation and their sustained accomplishments in aviation education. For example:

  • Enhancement of aviation safety
  • Development of effective / innovative teaching techniques
  • Advancement of professional standards
  • Development of significant technical support
  • Achievement of professional excellence
  • Creation of innovative instructional materials
  • Partnership on projects with the FAA and/or industry
  • Being a role model for and a mentor to other aviation educators.

Inductee Eligibility:

Candidates will be judged on their contributions to aviation and their sustained accomplishments in aviation education. For example:

  • Flight Instructor Hall of Fame nominees must have worked in the field of aviation education under 14 CFR parts 61, 121, 141, or 142 for a minimum of twenty (20) years prior to nomination and have been considered to have provided active flight instruction for at least 10 years (i.e. flight instruction in ANY category of aircraft or FAA approved training device/simulator)
  • Nominees must have held a valid FAA flight instructor certificate during that time.
  • Nominees may have worked as flight instructors, pilot examiners, technical support developers, instructional innovators, academicians, publications, and/or textbook authors.
  • Nominees must be of good moral character [i.e., FAR 61.153(c)] and must be respected within the aviation industry for their integrity, professionalism, and diligence.
    Prior suspension or revocation of any airman certificate or assessment of a civil penalty for pilot or flight violations may disqualify the nominee.
  • Accident history will be considered and may be disqualifying.
  • Special provisions and accommodations will be made for posthumous nominations and awards.

Meet the Selection Committee:

Greg Brown

Greg Brown is a retired US Marine Corps aviator who flew Sikorsky CH-53D and CH-53E helicopters and was an instructor pilot for both. Greg is the director of Education and Training Services at Helicopter Association International, where he creates continuing education resources for members and other aviation professionals. A pilot for over 35 years, Greg holds FAA commercial SEL and rotorcraft helicopter certificates, as well as a CFII rotorcraft helicopter rating and a remote pilot certificate. He is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma (Boomer Sooner) and has a master’s degree from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

Col. Juile Tizard

Col. Juile Tizard U.S. Air Force (retired), has been a professional pilot for over 40 years. She was one of the earliest women to graduate from Air Force pilot training and she served in several leadership positions in her 25 years of active duty and Air Force Reserve service. She was an Instructor Pilot flying the T-37 primary jet trainer, Flight Commander, and Chief, Pilot Upgrade. She then flew the KC-10 air refueling tanker as an Aircraft Commander, Flight Commander, and Chief, KC-10 Flight Safety. In the Air Force Reserve, she was a Director, Contingency Operations at Headquarters, Air Mobility Command. She was the founding commander of the 96th Flying Training Squadron where she supervised 110 instructor pilots flying the T-37, T-38, and T-1 training aircraft. She recently retired from flying as a Captain at a major airline flying the Airbus 320. She has also flown the DC-10, Boeing 737, 757, 767 and was an instructor pilot and Line Check Airman on the Boeing 737 fleet for over nine years

Thomas P. Turner

Thomas P. Turner holds an ATP certificate with flight instructor, CFII and MEI ratings, and a Master’s Degree in Aviation Safety. A 2015 Flight Instructor Hall of Fame inductee, Tom was the 2010 National FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year and 2008 FAA Central Region CFI of the Year. He has been Lead Instructor for the Bonanza pilot training program at the Beechcraft factory; production test pilot for engine modifications; aviation insurance underwriter; corporate pilot and safety expert; Captain in the United States Air Force; and contract course developer for Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.  He now directs the education and the safety arm of a 10,000+ member American Bonanza Society and writes FLYING LESSONS Weekly at his website thomaspturner.com. With over 4800 hours logged, including more than 2900 as an instructor, Tom writes, lectures, and instructs extensively from his home at THE AIR CAPITAL–Wichita, Kansas.

Brittney Tough

Brittney Tough is a passionate advocate for general aviation and the future of flight. She currently works for CloudAhoy, a company that builds flight debriefing products for pilots, as head of marketing and training. Previously, she was employed by Kitty Hawk of Mountain View, California, as chief pilot/training and safety manager working daily to develop the world’s first eVTOL (electrical vertical takeoff and lift) service. Before moving to Austin, Texas, in 2015 to join Redbird Flight Simulations, Brittney held several positions within AOPA spanning nearly eight years.

She graduated with honors from the University of Illinois with a degree in aviation human factors. Brittney is a CFI and holds commercial pilot and remote pilot certificates.

Barry Schiff

Barry Schiff holds 13 type ratings, 7 flight instructor ratings, and every category and class rating except airship. He is a retired TWA captain and his 28,000 hours have been accrued in 363 different types of aircraft. He has been an FAA-designated check airman on the Boeing 767 as well as in general aviation.

He has written more than 1,800 magazine articles—most notably in AOPA Pilot. These plus his 13 books have earned him 11 journalism awards. In addition to holding 5 world aviation speed records, Barry is the recipient of a Congressional Commendation, the Louis Bleriot Air Medal, Switzerland’s gold Proficiency Medal, and an honorary doctorate in aeronautical science. He also has been inducted into the Living Legends of Aviation.

Apply for the Instructor Hall of Fame today.

Honoring Inductees

of The Instructor Hall of Fame

2025 Mary Latimer

The Flight Instructor Hall of Fame in 2025 inducted Mary Latimer, a flight instructor and educator from Texas. Latimer first soloed in 1972, and had her commercial, CFI, and A&P certificates. She has been an IA since 1977 and an ATP since 1981. She also served as an air traffic controller at Lawton, Oklahoma, and Fort Worth Meacham from 1976 to 2002. Latimer was a designated pilot examiner, conducting at least 600 check rides between 2009 and 2017. Mary started the GIFT (Girls in Flight Training) Academy to promote aviation to women in aviation, to show support, and to encourage participation.

In receiving the honor, Latimer reflected on her inspiration. “When I was in high school a number of decades ago, our alma mater had one line that said, “Send my sons and daughters to stand beside immortals.” And I feel like maybe a small part of me has achieved that. I am standing beside immortals as I hold this Hall of Fame trophy, and 60 years ago those words were impossible to imagine.”

Mary Latimer
2025 Inductee Mary Latimer
Doug Stewart
2024 Co-Inductee Doug Stewart

2024 Co-Inductee Doug Stewart

Doug Stewart, the 2004 National Instructor of the Year, is a full-time flight instructor focusing on real world IFR training conducted on multi-day training trips. Of limited means, Doug’s original motivation for becoming a flight instructor was so that he could fly without having to pay for it. But soon after he started teaching, he realized that flight instruction was his life’s calling. To date he has provided more than 13,500 hours of flight instruction. He has been a Master Instructor for 26 years and a  Designated Pilot Examiner for more than 20 years. 

The Executive Director Emeritus of SAFE, Doug has served on the General Aviation Joint Safety Committee (GAJSC) for more than 10 years. He is also a subject matter expert for Pilot Workshops and Community Aviation. He has presented seminars to thousands of pilots from coast to coast and border to border and authored the monthly Vintage Instructor column for EAA’s Vintage Airplane magazine for several years. When not flying he is often found riding his bicycle.

2024 Co-Inductee Tim Tucker

2024 Co-Inductee Tim Tucker
2023 Inductee Lieutenant Colonel Herbert W. “Bill” Powley, retired U.S. Air Force
2023 Inductee Lieutenant Colonel Herbert W. “Bill” Powley, retired U.S. Air Force

2023 Inductee Lieutenant Colonel Herbert W. “Bill” Powley, retired U.S. Air Force

Powley graduated from the Air Force Academy and served more than 23 years as a fighter pilot, flight instructor, and test pilot, including two tours in Vietnam flying 347 missions in the F-4 and A-7. After his retirement from the Air Force in 1991, Powley continued to share his passion for aviation by volunteering his time to train pilots. He founded FLIGHT Foundation (Flight Lesson Instructional Grants Helping Teens) and has personally raised over $1.9 million. He has flown almost 12,000 students on more than 4,000 discovery flights, most of which were free.

Powley has been an active member and leader in many aviation organizations, including the Air Force Association, Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, the Experimental Aircraft Association and NAFI.  In 2010 he received the A Scott Crossfield Aerospace Science Teacher of the Year Award from the National Aviation Hall of Fame. The Tennessee Aviation Hall of Fame (TAHOF) created a special award to recognize him that same year (Tennessee Aviation Person of the Year). 

In 2011 he received Tennessee’s highest aviation recognition -the Career Contributions to Aviation Award and, in 2013, was inducted into the Tennessee Aviation Hall-of-Fame.

2022 Co-Inductee Catherine Cavagnaro

Catherine Cavagnaro is recognized as an expert on spins and aerobatics and teaches pilots from all over the United States and beyond at Ace Aerobatic School in Sewanee, Tennessee.  She writes the “Flying Smart” column for AOPA Pilot Magazine that addresses topics of safety, efficiency, proficiency, and the science of flight.  Catherine holds ATP, commercial and CFI-I certificates while also serving as a designated pilot examiner and FAA lead safety representative for the Nashville FSDO.

The General Aviation Awards Committee recognized Catherine in 2018 as the FAA Safety Representative of the Year, and  the FAA Certificated Flight Instructor of the Year in 2020. In 2018, Catherine was also inducted into the Tennessee Aviation Hall of Fame and earned the Award for Exemplary Teaching by Sewanee: The University of the South where she is Professor of Mathematics.

Catherine’s aviation career began later than she would have liked but she is making up for lost time. She grew up fascinated by the military aircraft that approached Moffett Field over her house in Sunnyvale, California. Catherine experienced the joy of flight early during regular trips to Ireland with her mother but learning to fly wouldn’t be in the cards for her until much later. Her father passed his love of mathematics on to Catherine after which she earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Santa Clara University.

During graduate studies toward her Ph.D. in mathematics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Catherine approached the local flight school for lessons; alas, her teaching assistant stipend sufficed to cover her living expenses and not much more. Still, she took her math homework to the airport just to watch the airplanes come and go.

While Catherine planned to settle back in California, a small liberal arts college with an airport on campus caught her eye. She accepted a position as Professor of Mathematics at Sewanee:  The University of the South but busied herself for the next several years establishing her career as a professional mathematician. In May of 1999, she earned tenure at the university, gave birth to her first son, and immediately ran to the airport and signed up for flying lessons at the Sewanee Franklin County Airport (KUOS).

During her training toward a private pilot certificate, Catherine met aviation author and aerobatic instructor William K Kershner who took an interest in her mathematics background. She learned about the science of flight by assisting him with some of the mathematics in his aviation manuals.  Catherine fell head over heels for aerobatics which she learned from Kershner. He introduced her to the University of Tennessee Space Institute where Catherine assisted with research projects, served as a test pilot and spin demonstration pilot, and studied graduate courses in aerodynamics and aviation systems.

After earning her flight instructor certificate, Catherine joined Kershner as an aerobatic instructor at his Ace Aerobatic School and continues the tradition of sharing safety with pilots in Sewanee since his passing in 2007. She also directs the Sewanee Flying Tigers, a flight school owned by Sewanee: The University of the South.

Catherine speaks around the country and online for the Federal Aviation Administration, AOPA, American Bonanza Society, National Association of Flight Instructors, and many other pilot organizations.  She serves as a regular guest on Aviation News Talk with Max Trescott as well as an expert for Pilot Workshops’ “IFR Scenarios,” “VFR Scenarios” and other educational products.

With many other goals yet ahead, Catherine continues her education in aviation as well as her mission of promoting safety.  In her spare time, she loves traveling the country with her sons Jack and Pete in their acrobatic Beechcraft Bonanza.

2022 Co-Inductee Catherine Cavagnaro
2022 Co-Inductee Catherine Cavagnaro
2022 Co-Inductee Ron Timmermans
2022 Co-Inductee Ron Timmermans

2022 Co-Inductee Ron Timmermans

Ron Timmermans, fulfilled a 40-year professional career as an architect and project manager before devoting himself to aviation on a full-time basis. He has been an independent flight instructor since 1998. These days, he owns and manages AileRon T, LLC, and he flies a Beechcraft Bonanza co-owned with his wife Barbara – who originally inspired him to become a Flight Instructor.

Ron has logged more than 4,000 hours of dual instruction given, nearly 1,300 of those hours in the past five years. He instructs at locations throughout Florida, where he also serves as a mentor and advocate for emerging and young pilots and CFIs. Before relocating to Florida, Ron lived in North Texas and provided flight training in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area.

Ron is an ATP-AMEL, Commercial-ASEL, CFI-IA, MEI-IA, AGI-Instrument, and Remote Pilot. He is a NAFI Master CFI and Master Ground Instructor, a Gold Seal Instructor, and an American Bonanza Society (ABS) Master Aviator. Ron is particularly well-known in the Beech community due to his active involvement in the Beechcraft Pilot Proficiency Program (BPPP) and Bonanza/Baron Pilot Training (BPT) program.

Ron began providing training to Beechcraft pilots in 1998. In addition to providing instruction for Bonanza and Baron pilots, he later developed the BPT training curricula approved for WINGS credit by the FAA and has also been active in the Companion Training Course for those pilots’ significant others. Since then, Ron has been active in the BPPP program of the American Bonanza Society (ABS.), and he has authored more than 50 articles published in the ABS Magazine. He is a frequent consultant to owners and buyers of Beechcraft airplanes and conducts frequent Beechcraft transition training.

Ron has served as a FAASTeam Lead Representative for the Orlando FSDO and the North Texas FSDO. He has presented at more than 30 WINGS safety seminars and at aviation events throughout Florida and during EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh WI. He has also been a frequent presenter at AOPA’s Rusty Pilots Seminars, Safety Seminars, and Flight Instructor Refresher Courses. He is a founding director of the WINGS Industry Network, and he volunteered on the FAA’s WINGS Usability Working Group in 2020-2021.

Ron’s outreach activities include presenting NAFI MentorLIVE webinars for flight instructors and hosting broadcasts for Florida Aviation Network live-streaming events to international audiences. He is a regular presenter at ABS national conventions, EAA AirVenture, Sun ‘n Fun, and numerous other aviation events. Ron is a contributing member of AOPA, EAA, NAFI, SAFE, ABS, BPT, BPPP, and Quiet Birdmen. In 2021 he was named the National Certificated Flight Instructor of the Year.

2021 Co-Inductee Greg Brown

2021 Co-Inductee Greg Brown
2021 Co-Inductee Greg Brown
2021 Co-Inductees John and Martha King
2021 Co-Inductees John and Martha King

2021 Co-Inductees John and Martha King

2020 & 2019 – No Inductees

2018 Inductee Richard L. Collins
2018 Inductee Richard L. Collins

2018 Inductee Richard L. Collins

2017 Inductee Wallace J. Moran

Moran has previously been honored as the 2013 recipient of NAFI’s Jack J. Eggspuehler service award among other accolades.

Moran started his aviation career as a general aviation flight instructor and later worked in the airline industry as a pilot and training instructor. he was a FAA check airman on many airline aircraft, including the Boeing 747, which he flew for 12 years, and the Boeing 767. He also spent many years in airline management as training supervisor, chief pilot and VP of safety and engineering. He has been active in general aviation as an airplane owner and flight instructor and has given more than 4,000 hours of flight instruction in GA airplanes and gliders.

He currently works as an FAA designated pilot examiner, independent flight instructor and FAA FAASTeam member. He is a longtime member of NAFI and is an eight time NAFI master CFI since 2001. Moran lives in Summerville, South Carolina.

2017 Inductee Wallace J. Moran
2017 Inductee Wallace J. Moran
2016 Inductee Jerald D. Cockrell
2016 Inductee Jerald D. Cockrell

2016 Inductee Jerald D. Cockrell

2015 Inductee Thomas P. Turner

Tom Turner has been a flight instructor since 1988, after serving as an officer in the United States Air Force. He has served aviation in a variety of roles, most recently as Executive Director of the ABS Air Safety Foundation. In his tenure there, Turner developed programs such as the Beechcraft Pilot Proficiency Program and the ABS Flight Instructor Academy. These programs educate and standardize both instructors and pilots in the techniques of flying Beech aircraft, drawing on the collective experience of American Bonanza Society instructors over the past three decades.

In addition to his duties at ABS, Turner has been a FAASTeam Lead Representative since the program’s inception, and earned the 2010 award as the Safety Team Representative of the Year, also serves on safety committees with NBAA, has presented forums at Sun ‘n Fun and EAA AirVenture, and is a founder of EAA’s Type Club Coalition, among other services to the community. He is also the author of three books: Weather Patterns and the Phenomena: A Pilot’s Guide; Cockpit Resource Management: The Private Pilot’s Guide; and Controlling Pilot Error: Checklists and Compliance, all published by McGraw-Hill. Turner also writes the FLYING LESSONS weekly safety e-newsletter available by free subscription at https://thomaspturner.com/

2015 Inductee Thomas P. Turner
2015 Inductee Thomas P. Turner
2015 Inductee Frederick Nauer
2015 Inductee Frederick Nauer

2015 Inductee Frederick Nauer

2014 Inductee Kirby V. Ortega

With 30 yrs at Cessna Flight Operations, Kirby was responsible for all piston engine employee flight activities, demonstration and customer training. He is typed in six Citations. Kirby lead the development team, producing the FITS Accepted G1000 Transition Course. With more than 24,000 accident-incident-free flight hours including 14,000 hours as a flight instructor, he is an active flight instructor mentoring pilots in Caravans and Citation jets. Kirby works as chief pilot for Yingling Aviation’s aircraft management program flying a CJ3, CJ1+, Conquests and Caravans. He is also a FAA Designated Pilot Examiner conducting PVT, IR, COM practical exams as well as initial type ratings and FAR 61.58 recurrent checks in the Citation Mustang. Kirby was the 2002 National Flight Instructor of the Year.

2014 Inductee Kirby V. Ortega
2014 Inductee Kirby V. Ortega
2013 Inductee Gregory G. Gorak
2013 Inductee Gregory G. Gorak

2013 Inductee Gregory G. Gorak

2012 Inductee Rudy Frasca

2012 Inductee Rudy Frasca
2012 Inductee Rudy Frasca

2011 & 2010 – No Inductees

2009 Inductee Paul Sanderson

2009 Inductee Paul Sanderson
2009 Inductee Paul Sanderson
2008 Co-Inductee Joan Mace
2008 Co-Inductee Joan Mace

2008 Co-Inductee Joan Mace

Joan has 65 years of aviation experience and started flight instructing in 1946 at Ohio University Airport in Athens, Ohio. Her strong interest in aviation began at Curtiss-Wright where she was responsible for checking landing gear, rivets, anf flaring panels. Later, the U.S. Army Air Forces accepted her for Women Air force Service Pilots (WASP) training.

After the war, Mace found her commercial and instructor certificates were all she needed to become the only woman among 22 instructors at Ohio University Airport. As the first female chair of a university aviation department, she has opened doors for women in aviation, helping create a four-year bachelor’s degree program in airway science in the College of Engineering at Ohio University and establishing an aviation advisory board at the university.

2008 Co-Inductee Charles Fairbanks

Charles became a flight instructor in 1947 and started Cardinal Air Training and the Conference of Flight Instructors (CFI) at Lunken Airport in Cincinnati. Fairbanks attended the original AOPA and Helicopter Association International (HAI) seminars. He is also an EAA flight adviser. With flight experience dating back to 1944 and including over 27,000 flight hours, he worked with Sporty’s in producing its first training video, “So You Want to Fly Helicopters.” As a member of EAA, AOPA, NAFI, Freemasons, Shrine, Eastern Star, Silver Wings, Quiet Birdsmen, the Professional Race Pilots Association, and HAI, Fairbanks has accomplished many things in the field of aviation.

2008 Co-Inductee Charles Fairbanks
2008 Co-Inductee Charles Fairbanks
2007 Co-Inductee Hal Shevers
2007 Co-Inductee Hal Shevers

2007 Co-Inductee Hal Shevers

Hal Shevers, founder of Sporty’s Flight Academy and Sporty’s Shops. Because of Hal’s tireless pioneering efforts, Sporty’s now delivers a variety of aviation educational services to tens of thousands of students around the world. He established The Sporty’s Foundation, created to support national educational initiatives directed toward youth. Through its support programs for young people, the foundation encourages a wide range of aviation career choices including avionic technician, engineer, mechanic and pilot. Hal Shevers has operated this world-renowned flight school while supporting youth aviation programs throughout the nation. A flight instructor for nearly fifty years, his commitment to excellence in education is unsurpassed.

2007 Co-Inductee Wolfgang Langewiesche

In 1939, Wolfgang Langewiesche’s gift for writing led him to a position with air facts magazine, and his first book, I’ll take the high road, promptly became a bestseller. in 1944, he published his most widely distributed work, Stick and Rudder. The basic facts about flying set forth in stick and rudder have withstood the test of time- more than 200,000 copies of the book had been sold by 1990, and it continues in print to this day. His role as a flight instructor, however, and his influence on the flight instruction community, is most pronounced in the articles he wrote for Harper’s magazine and Reader’s Digest during the later 1940s and 1950s.

2006 Co-Inductee Al Passell
2006 Co-Inductee Al Passell

2006 Co-Inductee Al Passell

Among the most prolific Pilot Examiners of all time, Al Passell dominated flight training in the central United States from the 1960s onward. In the classroom and in the cockpit, his concise lessons remain etched in the minds of countless aviators, from local pilots to airline captains.

2006 Co-Inductee Ralph Nelson

Ralph Nelson (NAFI #4), founding father and Vice President Emeritus of the National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI), had accumulated more than 10,000 hours in his logbook by the time he passed away in 2006. A safety crusader and innovative leader, he created and promoted A.M. Aviation Weather on public television as well as AOPA’s Weekend Ground School. He also served as leader of the Aviation Safety Foundation and Flight Safety Foundation for nearly two decades. One of his lasting legacies is the General Aviation Awards program and the Certificated Flight Instructor of the Year award.

2006 Co-Inductee Ralph Nelson
2006 Co-Inductee Ralph Nelson

2005 Inductee Howard Fried

Howard Fried has logged some 40,000 flight hours in over 60 years of flying. He started training pilots in the US Army Air Corps during WWII, and moved to general aviation after V-J Day. In 1964 he established Drake Aviation, an active flight school with several locations in the Midwest. He has been a lifelong crusader for aviation safety and proficiency. He was one of the first FAA Designated Examiners in 1978, and conducted more than 4,000 check rides. Fried has also written numerous books and articles, sharing his insight to flight safety.

2004 Inductee J. Vernon Ricks

Ricks is the founder of The Airmen, an organization dedicated to promoting safe formation flying; he established the organization in 1972. A pilot for over fifty years, he developed innovative techniques for teach formation flying that have come into wide acceptance. He has instructed in gliders, ag planes, biplanes, and seaplanes, as well as the more familiar single- and twin-engine aircraft.

2003 Inductee Barry Schiff
2003 Inductee Barry Schiff

2003 Inductee Barry Schiff

Schiff is an award winning journalist and author, who is well known to flying audiences for his numerous books and more than 1,000 articles published in 90 magazines. Many of his articles discuss personally developed concepts, procedures, and techniques that have received international acclaim. Barry has more that 26,000 hours logged in 272 types of aircraft. He holds five world speed records and has received numerous honors for his many contributions to aviation safety.

2002 Inductee Jack J. Eggspuehler

2002 Inductee Jack J. Eggspuehler
2002 Inductee Jack J. Eggspuehler
2001 Inductee Amelia Reid
2001 Inductee Amelia Reid

2001 Inductee Amelia Reid

Reid, who died in March 2001, taught more than 4,000 students to fly after beginning her California flight school out of the trunk of a 1959 Ford. Among her students was legendary air show pilot Sean D. Tucker. Over 60 years, she logged more than 55,000 flight hours.

2000 Co-Inductee Iris Critchell

2000 Co-Inductee Iris Critchell
2000 Co-Inductee Iris Critchell
2000 Co-Inductee Ken Medley
2000 Co-Inductee Ken Medley

2000 Co-Inductee Ken Medley

1999 Co-Inductee Anders Christenson

Anders Christenson was recognized for this honor because of his dedication to introducing aviation to the youth of his area. He initiated an aviation course where he taught at Edina Public High School, in Minnesota. He introduced more than 650 students to be at the controls of a Piper PA 150. In his last year before retirement, he had 21 pilots in the student body of 1650. In addition to teaching he served Minnesota as a Designated Pilot Examiner for forty years. In 2006 he and his wife moved to Maple Valley, WA, to be near their son. He still continues to serve as a Flight Instructor and on May 11, 2013 he attained the Golden Goal of having flown 30,000 hours. He humbly quotes his hero, General Doolittle, “I’d never be so lucky again”.

1999 Co-Inductee Anders Christenson
1999 Co-Inductee Anders Christenson
1999 Co-Inductee Dr. Dale DeRemer
1999 Co-Inductee Dr. Dale DeRemer

1999 Co-Inductee Dr. Dale DeRemer

1999 Co-Inductee Verne Jobst

Verne Jobst has flown aircraft from B-17 bombers to 747 transports, as well as balloons and gliders during his 50-plus years as a pilot. He soloed at age 16 in an Aeronca Chief and got his first airline job in 1951 flying DC-3s for Capital Airlines. Capital merged with United Airlines in 1961 and Verne became a part of that company. He has also flown as a corporate pilot for such companies as U.S. Steel, C&O Railroad, and Blannox.

Active in the sport aviation world, Jobst was president of the International Aerobatic Club (IAC) from 1973-78. He had previously served as editor of the IAC publication, Sport Aerobatics. As chief pilot for the 1977 Lindbergh Commemorative Tour, he logged hundreds of hours behind the controls of the EAA Air Museum’s Spirit of St. Louis replica.

Among his 40,000 logged flight hours, more than 11,500 were instructional hours, and he was inducted into the Flight Instructors Hall of Fame in 1999. Jobst has also served as air show director at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh and piloted a wide variety of historic aircraft including EAA’s B-17 Aluminum Overcast.

1999 Co-Inductee Verne Jobst
1999 Co-Inductee Verne Jobst
1998 Co-Inductee Marvin Easter
1998 Co-Inductee Marvin Easter

1998 Co-Inductee Marvin Easter

Marvin Easter is a native of the Waterloo/Cedar Rapids IA area and grew up completely fascinated with aviation. One of his childhood heroes was the great Johnny Livingston, the father of the Clipwing Monocoupe, once the largest Waco dealer and a local resident. Marvin earned his BA degree from Iowa State Teachers College in 1949 and learned to fly while working as an Iowa high school teacher. After earning his Private and Commercial pilot licenses in a Luscombe 8A, he became a certified flight instructor and taught flying at the Waterloo Flying Service.

Later, Marvin joined the Ohio State University Department of Aviation and would spend the next 30 years teaching ground and flight courses. He also had the opportunity to take part in numerous important research studies over the years that have been imperative to the growth of aviation. He retired in 1979, but his passion for airplanes and flying did not end there. He opened a small FBO and rebuilt such aircraft as a Cessna 140 and Piper PA-11, built a Starduster Too and, most recently, restored a prize winning Waco 10 he owns in partnership with several friends.

In 1984 flight instruction lured Marvin back to the classroom. After five years of retirement, he returned to Ohio State’s Department of Aviation and is still instructing students there today.

1998 Co-Inductee Bill Kershner

1998 Co-Inductee Bill Kershner
1998 Co-Inductee Bill Kershner
1998 Co-Inductee Joe Vorbeck
1998 Co-Inductee Joe Vorbeck

1998 Co-Inductee Joe Vorbeck

1997 Co-Inductee James “Pete” Campbell

1997 Co-Inductee James “Pete” Campbell
1997 Co-Inductee James “Pete” Campbell
1997 Co-Inductee Evelyn Bryan Johnson
1997 Co-Inductee Evelyn Bryan Johnson

1997 Co-Inductee Evelyn Bryan Johnson

1997 Co-Inductee Bernie Geier