OCTAVE CHANUTE AWARD

This award was created about 1901 by the Western Society of Engineers for papers of merit on engineering innovations. It is now called the "Chanute Flight Award" and is awarded by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc. (AIAA).
Octave Chanute, 1832–1910, was born in France and became a naturalized American. He was a self-taught engineer. He designed the first railroad bridge over the Missouri River and also the Union Stock Yards in Chicago and those in Kansas City.
In later life Chanute waged a long campaign to encourage the invention of the airplane. He collected information from every possible source and gave it back out to anyone who asked. He published a compendium of aviation information in 1894. In 1896 he commissioned several aircraft to be built, the ''Katydid'' had multiple wings that could be attached variously about the fuselage for ease of experimentation.
He is universally recoginsed as a prominent engineer, experimenter, writer and communicator, which is why the award is named in his memory.

Contents
Some Award Recipients
Links

Some Award Recipients



Howard Hughes, Engineer, Pilot

Albert Boyd, pioneering test pilot

Frank Kendall Everest, Jr, test pilot

Milton O. Thompson, NASA Director of Research

William J. Knight, Test pilot, Astronaut, Record setter

Albert Scott Crossfield, Test pilot, Astronaut

Neil Alden Armstrong, Astronaut

John Leonard (Jack) Swigert, Jr. Astronaut (Apollo 13 crewman)

Charles N Haas, Environmental Engineer

Alvin S. White, Test pilot

Links



Western Society of Engineers

Octave Chanute—A champion of aviation

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