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Frank N. Piasecki - 1954
Mr. Frank N. Piasecki was born in Philadelphia on October 24, 1919. He
studied mechanical engineering at the Towne School at the University of
Pennsylvania, then transferred to the Guggenheim School of Aeronautics at New
York Univ ersity, where he graduated with the degree of B.S. in Aeronautical
Engineering in 1940.
Following college he was an aircraft designer at Platt-LePage Aircraft
Corporation, and later an aerodynamicist for Edward G. Budd Manufacturing
Company, Aircraft Division.
In 1940 Mr. Piasecki founded and headed an engineering research group which was
incorporated early in 1943 as the P-V Engineering Forum. In this year the group
completed the PV-2, the second successful helicopter to fly in America. It was a
single-seat, single-rotored helicopter.
This achievement attracted the attention of the U.S. Navy to Mr. Piasecki's
proposals for a large, tandem rotored helicopter suitable for transport use, and
he was awarded a contract for engineering and construction of an aircraft of
this type. This helicopter, the XHRP, known popularly as the Flying Banana today
is entrusted to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, as one of America's
historic aircraft.
In the years since, Mr. Piasecki has sparked further design and production of
transport helicopters. The largest now in production is a 20-passenger transport
and rescue aircraft designed for service in Arctic regions. His company, now the
Piasecki Helicopter Corporation, has more than 4500 employees and occupies over
600,000 square feet of manufacturing space. Mr. Piasecki is presently Chairman
of the Board and head of the company's research and development activity.
Mr. Piasecki is a Fellow of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, an Honorary
Fellow of the American Helicopter Society. In 1951 he received the Lawrence
Sperry Award of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences "for outstanding
contribution to the design and development of Helicopters."
He has been president of the American Helicopter Society and Chairman of the
Helicopter Council of the Aircraft Industries Association. He is a member of the
advisory committee of the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics of New York
University. He is the donor of the Dr. Alexander Klemin Award, given annually by
the American Helicopter Society for outstanding work in the field of rotary-wing
aeronautics.
Mendel Medal Presentation Program, May 4,
1954. Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania.
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