Lilienthal Gliding Medal

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Lilienthal Gliding Medal
Obverse of the Lilienthal Medal
Awarded forRemarkable performance in gliding, or eminent services to the sport of gliding over a long period of time
CountryWorldwide
Presented byFédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI)
First awarded1938
Last awardedcurrent
WebsiteFAI official site
Reverse of the Lilienthal Medal awarded to Tadeusz Góra

Lilienthal Gliding Medal – the highest soaring award in the world, established by Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) in 1938, and is given at the annual Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) General Conference.[1]

It was created in honour of Otto Lilienthal, a German pioneer of human aviation. It aims "to reward a particularly remarkable performance in gliding, or eminent services to the sport of gliding over a long period of time". The actual Lilienthal Medal was designed by Austrian artist Josef Humplik.

The first winner of the Lilienthal Gliding Medal in the world was Tadeusz Góra for his record-breaking 577.8 kilometres (359.0 miles; 312.0 nautical miles) flight on 18 May 1938, glider PWS-101 from Bezmiechowa to Soleczniki (near Vilnius).

The Medal is awarded by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale via vote of the delegates to the International Gliding Commission at the annual Plenary in March. In 2012, it was decided to end the practice of awarding the Medal for accomplishments of the previous calendar year, and to associate the Medal with the year in which the recipient is determined. Consequently, the year 2013 was not awarded, therefore does not appear in the table below.

Recipients

Recipients of the International Gliding Commission award, from 1938 to present, include:[2]

award
year
recipient nationality notes
1938 Tadeusz Góra Poland Poland for a goal flight of 577.8 kilometres (359.0 miles; 312.0 nautical miles)
1948 Lt. Per-Axel Persson Sweden Sweden
1949 John C. Robinson United States United States
1950 William S. Ivans United States United States
1951 Marcelle Choisnet-Gohard France France
1952 Charles Atger France France
1953 Victor M. Iltchenko
USSR
flight of 520 miles (450 nautical miles; 840 kilometres), a world two-seater record, from Moscow to Stalingrad[3]
1954 Philip A. Wills United Kingdom United Kingdom
1955 Dr. Joachim Küttner Germany Germany
1956 Dr. Paul B. MacCready Jr. United States United States
1957 Don Luis Vicente Juez Gomez Spain Spain
1958 Wolf Hirth Germany Germany
1959 Richard E. Schreder United States United States
1960 Pelagia Majewska Poland Poland
1961 Adolph 'Pirat' Gehriger Switzerland Switzerland
1962 Paul F. Bikle United States United States
1963 Heinz Huth Germany Germany
1964 Alvin H. Parker United States United States
1965 Edward Makula Poland Poland
1966 Anne Burns United Kingdom United Kingdom
1967 Lennart Stahlfors Sweden Sweden
1968 Alejo Williamson Chile Chile
1969 Eric Nessler France France
1970 Hans-Werner Grosse Germany Germany
1971 Karl H. Striedieck United States United States
1972 Jan Wróblewski Poland Poland twice World Champion, 1965 Open and 1972 Standard Class
1973 Mrs. Ann Welch United Kingdom United Kingdom
1974 August Hug Switzerland Switzerland
1975 Adela Dankowska Poland Poland for her world records & winning the 1975 International Women's Gliding Competition
1976 Louis A. de Lange Netherlands Netherlands
1977
George B. Moffat, Jr.
United States United States
1978 Helmut Reichmann Germany Germany
1980 Hans Wolf Austria Austria
1981 George Lee United Kingdom United Kingdom World gliding champion on three consecutive occasions
1982 Hans Nietlispach Switzerland Switzerland
1984 C.E. Wallington Australia Australia
1985 Sholto Hamilton 'Dick' Georgeson New Zealand New Zealand
1986 Maj. Richard L. Johnson United States United States
1987 Juhani Horma Finland Finland
1988 Ingo Renner Australia Australia
1990 Fred Weinholtz Germany Germany
1991 Raymond W. Lynskey New Zealand New Zealand
1992 Franciszek Kępka Poland Poland
1993 Bernald S. Smith United States United States
1994 Terrence Raymond Delore New Zealand New Zealand
1995 Tor Johannessen Norway Norway
1997 Dr. Manfred Reinhardt Germany Germany
1998 Oran Nicks United States United States
1999 Hana Zejdová Czech Republic Czech Republic
2000 Klaus Ohlmann Germany Germany
2001 James M. Payne United States United States
2002 John Hamish Roake New Zealand New Zealand
2003 Prof. Ing. Piero Morelli Italy Italy
2004 Janusz Centka Poland Poland
2005 Ian Strachan United Kingdom United Kingdom
2006 Alan Patching Australia Australia
2007 Derek Piggott United Kingdom United Kingdom
2008 Roland Stuck France France
2009 Ross Macintyre New Zealand New Zealand
2010 Reiner Rose Germany Germany
2011 Giorgio Galetto[4] Italy Italy
2012 Bob Henderson New Zealand New Zealand
2014 not awarded
2015 Loek Boermans Netherlands Netherlands
2016 Rainer Wienzek Germany Germany
2017 Patrick Pauwels Belgium Belgium
2018 not awarded
2019 Richard 'Dick' Bradley South Africa South Africa
2020 Gisela Weinreich Germany Germany
2021 Eric Mozer United States United States
2022 not awarded
2023 Jana Vepřeková Czech Republic Czech Republic - in the history of women's world sailing, she has the largest number of participations at the WC and EC, she won a medal at every 2nd

- 10 medals from top world and European competitions (1x gold, 3x silver and 6x bronze)

2024 Tadeáš Wala Slovakia Slovakia

See also

References

  1. ^ "SSA Awards and SSA Recognized Awards - International Awards". www.SSA.org. Soaring Society of America. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
  2. ^ "FAI Gliding Commission (IGC) Awards". www.FAI.org. Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. 3 August 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-11-27. Retrieved 2016-11-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "Galetto awarded with the Lilienthal Gliding Medal". www.FAI.org. Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. 11 July 2017. Retrieved 21 August 2019.