George Schwartz "Wheaties" Welch (May 18, 1918 – October 12, 1954) was a World War II flying ace, a Medal of Honor nominee, and an experimental aircraft pilot after the war. Welch is best known for allegedly being the first pilot to break the 'sound barrier' (one week before Chuck Yeager) in his prototype XP-86 Sabre. However, the flight is generally not recognized as an official record because of a lack of a verifiable speed measurement.
After Pearl Harbor, Welch returned to the continental U.S. to give war bond speeches until being assigned to the 36th Fighter Squadron of the 8th Fighter Group in New Guinea. Dissatisfied with the considerably older Bell P-39 Airacobra, Welch repeatedly appealed to be transferred to the 80th Fighter Squadron which flew the P-38 Lightning until he was granted a transfer. Welch flew three combat tours (a total of 348 combat missions with 16 confirmed credits) before malaria retired him from the war.
Welch left the USAAF in July 1944 and became chief test pilot for North American Aviation's Inglewood, California production plant.
Welch was portrayed in the 1970 film Tora! Tora! Tora! by Rick Cooper.
In September, 1947, the F-86 project moved to the Muroc test facility (now Edwards AFB, California), the same base at which the Bell X-1 was being developed. North American was instructed by Secretary of the Air Force Stuart Symington that they were not, under any circumstances, to break the sound barrier before the X-1 achieved this milestone. However, Welch disregarded this order, and during a test flight on October 1, 1947 he entered a steep dive from 35,000 ft. During the dive, Welch observed symptoms compatible with Mach jump, and according to some, a sonic boom was heard at the base. However, due to problems with the landing gear, further full-speed flights were delayed. On October 14, the same day that Yeager was to attempt supersonic flight, Welch reputedly performed a second supersonic dive. This time he started from 37,000 ft, and executed a full-power 4g pullout, greatly increasing the power of his apparent sonic boom. Yeager broke the sound barrier approximately 30 minutes later.
To justify the investment in the X-1 program, the Pentagon allegedly ordered the results of Welch's flights classified and did not allow North American to publicly announce that the XP-86 had gone supersonic until almost a year later. The Air Force still denies that Welch broke the sound barrier first. Welch's flights were unofficial and not tracked by NACA measuring equipment, making verification impossible (pitot tubes of the day suffered from compressibility effects near the speed of sound). North American RF-86 Sabre
After the war, Welch returned to flight testing — this time in the F-100 Super Sabre - his F-100's chase plane was flown by Yeager. Welch became the first man to break the sound barrier in level flight with this aircraft on May 25, 1953. However, stability problems with the aircraft arose and on Columbus Day, October 12, 1954, Welch's YF-100-A disintegrated during a 7g pullout at Mach 1.55. When found, Welch was still in the ejection seat, mortally wounded, and was aided by NAA test Navion pilots Robert "Bob" Baker and Bud Pogue and medevacd out by helicopter, but was pronounced dead on arrival at the army hospital. North American RF-100A Slick Chick
1918 births | 1954 deaths | American World War II flying aces | Korean War veterans | American aviators | Recipients of US Distinguished Service Cross | United States Army officers | American World War II veterans
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