List of U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School alumni
Appearance

The
test engineers, and flight test navigators to lead and conduct test and evaluation of aerospace weapon systems.[1] The school was established on September 9, 1944, as the Flight Test Training Unit at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (AFB) in Dayton, Ohio.[2] To take advantage of the uncongested skies and superb flying weather, the school was moved on February 4, 1951, to its present location at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert of Southern California.[2] Edwards AFB is the home of the Air Force Test Center and has been an integral part of flight testing since June 25, 1951.[3]
Between 1962 and 1972, the Test Pilot School expanded its role to include astronaut training for military test pilots.EPNER.[7]
Famous alumni
The following graduates of the USAF Test Pilot School are listed in the roles for which they are most notable.[8] These roles include:
- human spaceflight program to command, pilot, or serve as a crew member of a spacecraft.
- Flight test – Alumni notable for their work in flight testing including the "Golden Age" of jet flight testing: 1948 to 1968.[9]
- Military commander– Alumni who achieved notability as the commanding officer of a military unit.
- Author – Alumni who have authored books on flight test.
Key
Service | ||
---|---|---|
RCAF | Royal Canadian Air Force | |
USAF | United States Air Force | |
USAFR | United States Air Force Reserve | |
USN | United States Navy | |
USNR | United States Navy Reserve | |
USMC | United States Marine Corps | |
Civilians | From specified U.S. contractors and government agencies | |
Rank | Military rank | For individuals who have served in the armed forces . The rank shown is current at the time this list was created and is subject to change.
|
"n/a" | For civilians who have not served in the armed forces and therefore do not have military rank. | |
Class | Year/Letter | The year and order in which a class started. For example, 07A was the first of two classes to start in 2007.[10] |
Roman Numeral | Four Aerospace Research Pilot School (ARPS) classes designated I, II, III, and IV, that prepared students for crewed spaceflight operations. These classes were dropped when the USAF lost its crewed spaceflight mission.[11] | |
MOL | Classes to train military astronauts of the Manned Orbital Laboratory (MOL) program. MOL was cancelled in 1969 before any of the astronauts went into space.[12]
| |
AFIT | The USAF TPS selects up to eight students per year to attend the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT) at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. These individuals attend 15 months of class work and thesis preparation prior to completing the USAF TPS curriculum.[7] | |
"n/a" | For faculty who taught at USAF TPS but were never students of the school. |
Astronauts




ISS Commander, Boeing Starliner
Pilot and former American with the most time in space




spacewalk

* Individual was killed in a work-related (aviation) accident.

Flight test




* Individual was killed in a work-related (aviation) accident.
Name | Service | Rank | Class | Notable events | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Milburn G. Apt* | USAF | Captain | 54B | First to exceed Mach 3. Speed record of Mach 3.2 in X-2 | [117][118] |
Fred J. Ascani
|
USAF | Major General | 46B | Father of F-86 speed record
|
[119] |
Richard Bong* | USAF | Major | 45 | United States' highest-scoring air ace. Medal of Honor recipient | [120] |
James "JB" Brown | USAF | Major | 86A | F-117 Nighthawk chief test pilot
|
[121] |
Robert Cardenas | USAF | Brig. General | 46J | B-29 commander on mission to break sound barrier. Chief USAF test pilot for YB-49 flying wing
|
[122] |
Ken Chilstrom | USAF | Colonel | 45 | Tested over twenty German and Japanese aircraft during World War II. First military pilot to fly XP-86 . First jet air race. First transport of air mail by jet
|
[123] [124] [125] [126] |
Glen Edwards* | USAF | Captain | 45 | Namesake of Edwards Air Force Base | [127] |
Frank K. Everest | USAF | Brig. General | 46D | Speed record of Mach 2.9 in the X-2. Subject and co-author of The Fastest Man Alive | [128] |
Fitzhugh L. Fulton | USAF | Brig. General | 52B | Altitude record of 85,360 ft (26.02 km) in the testing | [129] |
Darryl Greenamyer | Lockheed | n/a | 63A | Piston engine speed record of 776 km/h (482 mph) in an F-104
|
[130][131] |
Bob Hoover | USAF | Lieutenant | 46C | Flew chase during the Mach one flight. Named "the greatest stick-and-rudder man who ever lived" by P-51
|
[132] |
Dick Johnson | USAF | Major | 46C | 1948 world speed record in the F‑86. First flights of the YF‑102, YF‑106, and F‑111 | [133] |
Kelly Latimer | USAF | Lt Colonel | 96B | First female test pilot for NASA's Cosmic Girl
|
[134][135] |
Tony LeVier | Lockheed | n/a | 45 | Lockheed chief test pilot. XF-104, U-2 testing
|
[136] |
Donald L. Mallick | USNR | LCDR | 64A | LLRV, XB-70, and YF-12 testing | [137][138] |
Arthur W. Murray | USAF | Major | 45G | X-4, X-5 testing
|
[139] |
Art Nalls | USMC | Lt Colonel | 85A | Harrier testing; owner and air show pilot of privately owned Harrier
|
[140] |
Wilbert Pearson | USAF | Major General | 82A | First pilot to shoot down a satellite from an aircraft; commander of Air Force Flight Test Center | [141][142] |
Bruce Peterson | NASA | n/a | 63A | M2-F1, M2-F2, HL-10 lifting body flights | [143] |
Steve Pisanos | USAF | Colonel | 45D | F-4E testing
|
[144] |
Jack Ridley* | USAF | Colonel | 46A | Project engineer for the team that broke the sound barrier | [145] |
Lou Schalk | USAF | Captain | 54A | First flight of the A-12; flight test of A-12, YF-12 and SR-71 Blackbird; Chief test pilot of Lockheed Skunk Works | [146][147][148] |
Robert L. Stephens | USAF | Colonel | 49D | Speed and altitude records testing the SR-71
|
[149] |
Robert E. Thacker | USAF | Colonel | 46 | P-82 distance/speed record, Lockheed solar-powered aircraft
|
[150] |
Guy M. Townsend | USAF | Brig. General | 46F | Co-pilot on the first flight of the KC-135 Stratotanker
|
[151] |
Joseph John "Tym" Tymczyszyn | FAA | n/a | 49C | Test Pilot on America's First Commercial Jet Aircraft, the Boeing 707 | [152] |
Chuck Yeager | USAF | Brig. General | 46C | Fighter ace; first to travel faster than sound during level flight; first to reach Mach 2.5; Commandant of Aerospace Research Pilot School | [153] |
Military commanders

Name | Service | Rank | Class | Notable events | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
James A. Abrahamson
|
USAF | Lt General | 66B, MOL | Strategic Defense Initiative director | [154] |
Spence M. Armstrong | USAF | Lt General | 64C | Vice commander Air Force Systems Command, senior advisor to the NASA administrator | [155][156] |
William J. Campbell | USAF | Lt General | 62C, IV | Vice commander Strategic Air Command, TPS Commandant | [157] |
Eugene P. Deatrick | USAF | Colonel | 51A, 53C | TPS Commandant. Rescue of Navy Lt. Dieter Dengler | [158][159] |
Gabby Gabreski | USAF | Colonel | 45G | Top American fighter ace in Europe during World War II
|
[160][161] |
Robert T. Herres | USAF | General | 66B, MOL | Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff | [162] |
Donald J. Kutyna
|
USAF | General | 65C | North American Aerospace Defense Command
|
[163] |
John M. Loh | USAF | General | 67B | Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force | [164] |
Ronald W. Yates | USAF | General | 66B | Air Force Materiel Command | [165] |
Authors

Name | Service | Rank | Class | Notable events | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Donald S. Lopez | USAF | Colonel | 47F | Author of two aviation books. Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum deputy director | [166][167][168] |
George J. Marrett | USAF | Captain | 64A | Author of five aviation books, three on flight testing including "Contrails Over the Mojave," one on combat in Vietnam and one on a test pilot building a church. | [169][170][171][172] |
Notes
- ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 9.
- ^ a b "U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School History". United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2017-04-17.
- ^ "History of AFTC". United States Air Force. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
- ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond. p. 233.
- ^ Young, J. Forging Aerospace Power for America. pp. 3–4.
- ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 19.
- ^ a b USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 18.
- WP:MILMOS#NOTE.
- ISBN 978-1-59114-511-0.
- ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 8.
- ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond. p. 50.
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- ^ "Biography of Joshua Kutryk". Canadian Space Agency. 2023-11-28. Retrieved 2024-06-23.
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- ^ "Kutyna Biography". Air Force Link. United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 2008-07-09. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
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- ^ "Yates Biography". Air Force Link. United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 2008-07-09. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
- ISBN 1-56098-916-5.
- ISBN 0-553-27441-4.
- ^ "Lopez Biography". Gathering of Eagles. Montgomery, Alabama: Gathering of Eagles Foundation. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
- ISBN 1-58834-104-6.
- ISBN 1-59114-510-4.
- ISBN 0-275-99066-4.
- ISBN 978-1-59114-511-0.
References
- ISBN 0-89141-076-7.
- Ellis, Lee (2004). Who's Who of NASA Astronauts (2nd ed.). River Falls, Wisconsin: Americana Group Publishing. ISBN 0966796144.
- Eppley, Charles V. (March 1963). "History of the USAF Experimental Flight Test School 4 February 1951 – 12 October 1961" (PDF). Fort Belvoir, Virginia: Defense Technical Information Center. pp. 15–16. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 15, 2021. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
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- "Graduate Course Catalog and Student Handbook, 2007-08" (PDF). USAF TPS Curriculum Standards Division. 2007-06-22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
- Glines, Carroll V. (1980). The Saga of the Air Mail (Illustrated ed.). Manchester, New Hampshire: Ayer Publishing. ISBN 0-405-12213-6.
- Hatch, Gardner N.; Winter, Frank H. (1993). P-51 Mustang (2nd ed.). Nashville, Tennessee: Turner Publishing Company. ISBN 1-57806-649-2.
- ISBN 1-56098-457-0.
- ISBN 1-56098-752-9.
- ISBN 1-58834-104-6.
- ISBN 1-59114-510-4.
- ISBN 0-275-99066-4.
- ISBN 978-1-59114-511-0.
- USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond. Privately Published. 1994.
- Young, James O. (2007). "Forging Aerospace Power for America" (PDF). U.S. Air Force Flight Test Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-12. Retrieved 2015-01-03.
- Young, James O. (2007). "Milestones in Aerospace History at Edwards AFB" (PDF). U.S. Air Force Flight Test Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-23. Retrieved 2015-01-03.
External links
- "USAF Test Pilot School official website". United States Air Force. Retrieved 2024-09-10.