Glenn Messer
Glenn Edmund Messer (July 12, 1895 – June 13, 1995) was an American aviation pioneer, responsible for major advances in the use and modification of existing aircraft and in the design and construction of aircraft and aircraft instruments.
Biography
He was born in Henry County, Iowa on July 12, 1895.[1][2]
He began his flying career by taking lessons on a Wright biplane from aviator George Gustafson in Bay City, Michigan.
Messer operated an Birmingham Municipal Airport in Birmingham, Alabama with Edward Stinson. He later operated Messer Field. In 1927 he started the Southern Aircraft Corporation which designed and built the Air Boss. He later started The Glenn E. Messer Company of Birmingham.
He died on June 13, 1995 in Birmingham, Alabama.
Legacy
The highway from 5th Avenue North in downtown Birmingham to the airport was named Glenn E. Messer Airport Highway in his honor.
Timeline
- 1911 - takes first flying lessons
- 1917 - joins the Aviation Section of Signal Corps
- 1919 - flyer on new airmail route from Washington, D.C. to New York, NY
- 1920 - starts Messer Flying Circus (Phoebe Fairgrave Omlie soon joins)
- 1922 - starts Birmingham Aero Club to sell airplanes
- 1925 - organizes company to sell Dim-A-Lite products
- 1927 - starts Southern Aircraft Corporation (Messer Aeronautical Industries Inc.)
- 1932 - starts The Glenn E. Messer Company
- 1965 - The Glenn E. Messer Company, Inc. begins instrument repair operation in Woodlawn
- 1976 - forms Southern Museum of Flight Foundation
References
- ↑ He used the year 1894 for his World War I draft. The Social Security Death Index uses the year 1895.
- ↑ Ralph Cooper. "Glenn Messer". Early Birds of Aviation. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
Glenn E. Messer was born in Henry County, Iowa, July 12, 1895, son of a farmer, General Contractor, Hardware and Farm Implement Dealer. He attended local grade and high schools, then was induced to enter Medical School at the University of Iowa by their elderly family doctor who agreed to pay his college expenses ... Glenn Messer passed away Tuesday A.M. June 13, 1995 in Birmingham, leaving his wife Tommie, and a daughter, Sarah L. Baker surviving.
Further reading
- Morehouse, Harold E. (July 1995) "Glenn E. Messer: Pioneer Mid-West Aviator." Early Bird's CHIRP. No. 96
- Wilson, George Tipton. "The Flying Omlies." Aviation History Magazine.