George J. Mead

George Jackson Mead (December 27, 1891 Everett, Massachusetts - January 20, 1949 Hartford, Connecticut) was an American aircraft engineer. He is best known as one of the chief founding team members, together with Frederick Rentschler, of Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Mead and Rentschler left Wright Aeronautical with the plan to start their own aviation-related business; they founded Pratt & Whitney Aircraft in July 1925. Their first project was to build a new, large, air-cooled, radial aircraft engine of Mead's design, which soon came to be named the Wasp. The first Wasp model was the R-1340, and a large series of Wasp models and Hornet models followed. Mead, as Vice President of Engineering, was the head of engineering for Pratt & Whitney from 1925 to 1935. He later left Pratt & Whitney and its parent United Aircraft. He served as the president of the U.S. National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), and he served as head of the aeronautical section of the National Defense Advisory Commission during World War II, as a manager in the U.S. government's war materiel production effort.

Personal facts

George J. Mead
Birth dateDecember 27, 1891
Birth nameGeorge Jackson Mead
Birth place
Everett Massachusetts
Date of deathJanuary 20, 1949
Place of death
Hartford Connecticut
Residence
West Hartford Connecticut
Known for
Pratt & Whitney
United Aircraft
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics

Search

George J. Mead on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.nasm.si.edu/collections/cons.cfm?id=14570