Voyager Aircraft’s non-stop and unrefueled flight around the
world in December of 1986 placed Mojave proudly on the map and placed
Dick Rutan in the history books.
In December of 2005, Dick set another world record. This
record
was set in the EZ-Rocket for the longest distance in a ground launched
rocket powered aircraft. He flew from the Mojave Spaceport to
the
California City Airport. Touted as the “shortest
long
distance flight,” this record is recognized by the National
Aeronautics Association (NAA), and is in the record books. On
board that flight, Dick carried mail to be delivered to California
City, as well as American flag patches and flight covers that will be
sold to raise money for The Dick Rutan Scholarship Fund, a fund that
awards multiple scholarships each year. In April of 2006,
Dick
was awarded the NAA “Most Memorable Flight of 2005”
award
in Washington, DC for the flight from the Mojave Spaceport to the
California City Airport. Also, for that record setting
flight,
Dick was awarded the Louis Bleriot Medal in November of 2006.
This prestigious medal was established in 1936 in memory of Louis
Bleriot, a great aviation pioneer.
Early in 2005, Dick Rutan formed a new company called Voyager Aerospace
Corporation. He has four projects emerging with this company,
and
two of them are unique aircraft.
In 2003, Dick Rutan was elected as a director of the East Kern Airport
District (EKAD). With the launches and successes of Burt
Rutan’s (Dick’s brother) SpaceShipOne, the EKAD has
attained status of Spaceport as well. Dick is proud to be a
governing member of this newly emerging space tourism industry.
In June of 2003, Dick Rutan became an Eagle at the Gathering of Eagles
in Montgomery, Alabama. This prestigious honor was his in
1988,
two years after the Voyager flight, and they bringing him back for a
second induction to honor his service in the Air Force. He will join
the ranks with aviation and space greats including Buzz Aldrin, Gene
Cernan, Neil Armstrong, Pete Conrad, and other flyers that include
Pappy Boyington, Joe Engle, and many others.
In July of 2002, Dick Rutan was inducted into the National Aviation
Hall of Fame in Dayton, Ohio. This esteemed enshrinement
honored
Dick and three other Americans “whose heroism helped define
20th
Century America.”
In 2001, Dick Rutan became the chief test pilot for XCOR and has been
flying the first-ever rocket powered experimental Long EZ (pronounced
Long Easy). Named the EZRocket, this air vehicle has not only
set
a world record, but the proof of concept is also setting the future for
rocket travel and the intensifying sport of rocket powered aircraft
racing.
In May of 2000, Dick Rutan was a last minute addition to a sightseeing
airplane trek to the North Pole. The biplane, a Russian AN-2
Antonov, landed beautifully on the glass-like ice, but within seconds,
the joyride was headed for disaster. Unseasonably thin, the
ice
quickly began to stress and crack under the weight of the
plane.
A quick power-up to ‘go-around’ and locate a
thicker spot
on the ice resulted in the aircraft suddenly dipping nose first through
the ice, sinking toward the freezing ocean, and certain
death.
The wings of the AN-2 suspended the aircraft so the crew could retrieve
their survival equipment that was packed in the rear of the sinking
plane. For more than a dozen hours, the crew was stranded at
the
top of the world. In the distance, they heard a faint engine
and
soon would see the Twin Otter from First Air that would rescue them and
return them to their families.
Dick obtained his balloon pilot’s license in 1995 (Commercial
free air balloon; helium and hot air). In 1998, Dick Rutan
attempted to make the first ever flight around the world in a balloon
in the Global Hilton. That attempt ended three hours after
takeoff. The balloon’s helium cell ruptured (due to
a
manufacturer’s defect) while the team floated at 30,000
feet. When the crew was at a safer 6,000 foot altitude, the
crew
dramatically bailed from the crippled craft. The capsule
landed
unmanned in Texas and burst into flames.
Within minutes of landing on terra firma, Dick pledged to try again,
and built a second capsule called World Quest. This, with a
new
constrained volume helium lifting system (super pressure style) held
promise Dick would indeed succeed in balloon world flight.
The
World Quest Project ceased when a rival team captured the milestone in
March of 1999.
From April 4th to June 24th of 1997, Dick completed The Spirit of EAA
Friendship World Tour, along with flight lead, Mike Melvill.
This
“Around The World In 80 Nights” flight was
completed in two
small experimental Long-EZ aircraft that Dick and Mike built side by
side two decades ago.
Since Voyager’s world flight, Dick has been traveling the
world
on the lecture circuit, telling his tale of the magnificent Voyager
project and flight and of the North Pole adventure. The
Voyager
story is one of tremendous courage, of vision, and of adventure and is
often referred to as ‘aviation’s last
first.’
Dick received both his solo pilot’s license and
driver’s
license on his sixteenth birthday. At the age of nineteen,
Dick
joined the Air Force Aviation Cadet Program, was commission Lieutenant
and later received a Bachelor of Science Degree at the American
Technological University through the Air Force Professional Education
“Boot Strap” Program.
As a Tactical Air Command fighter pilot during most of his two decades
in the Air Force, Rutan flew 325 combat missions in Vietnam, 105 of
them as a member of a high-risk classified operation commonly known as
the “MISTY’s.” While on his
last strike
reconnaissance mission over North Vietnam in September of 1968, he was
hit by enemy ground fire, and forced to eject from his burning
F-100. Dick evaded enemy capture and was later rescued by the
Air
Force’s “Jolly Green Giant” helicopter
team.
Before retiring from the Air Force in 1978, Lt. Col. Rutan had been
awarded the Silver Star, five Distinguished Flying Crosses, 16 Air
Medals and the Purple Heart.
After retirement, Dick joined his brother, Burt, as Production Manager
and Chief Test Pilot for Rutan Aircraft Factory. Dick Rutan
flew
the test flight development program of many military and civilian
experimental aircraft and set numerous world speed and distance records
in his Long-EZ, a popular Rutan designed home-built airplane.
Dick was awarded the Louis Bleriot Medal by the prestigious Federation
Aeronautique Internationale during a ceremony in Brussels, Belgium in
recognition of these record-setting flights.
In early 1981, Dick Rutan resigned from his brother’s company
and
founded Voyager Aircraft, Inc., and prepared to complete the first-ever
around the world, non-stop, non-refueled flight. On the
morning
of December 14, 1986, a fuel laden Voyager took off on the history
making flight. Nine days, three minutes and forty four
seconds
later, Dick set the storm-battered Voyager down on the dry lakebed at
Edwards Air Force Base in California, successfully completing the
six-year quest. The Voyager is now proudly suspended in the
Smithsonian Air and Space Museum’s “Milestones of
Flight” gallery in our nation’s capitol.
Four days following the historic flight of the Voyager, President
Ronald Reagan awarded Dick the Presidential Citizen’s Medal
of
Honor at a special ceremony. The medal has been presented
only
sixteen times in the history of the United States.
Dick’s wife, Kris, is a kindergarten teacher.
Together, they have four daughters and nine grandchildren.
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