thumb|Earle Ovington and wife circa 1913 [[File:Unterschrift Earle Lewis Ovington amerikanischer Luftfahrtingenieur, Flieger und Erfinder.png|center|frameless|class=notpageimage skin-invert-image|upright=0.8|Signature of Earle Lewis Ovington]]

thumb|[[Edward M. Morgan, Frank Harris Hitchcock, and Earle Lewis Ovington and the Blériot XI]]

thumb|[[Edward M. Morgan, Frank Harris Hitchcock, and Earle Lewis Ovington]]

Earle Lewis Ovington (December 20, 1879 – July 21, 1936) was an American aeronautical engineer, aviator and inventor, and served as a lab assistant to Thomas Edison. Ovington piloted the first official airmail flight in the United States in a Blériot XI on September 23, 1911. He carried a sack of mail from Nassau Boulevard aerodrome, Garden City, New York, to Mineola, New York. He circled at 500 feet and tossed the bag over the side of the cockpit and the sack burst on impact, scattering letters and postcards. He delivered 640 letters and 1,280 postcards, including a letter to himself from the United States Post Office Department designating him as "Official Air Mail Pilot #1." He married Adelaide in 1911 and they had two children: Earle Kester Ovington (1912–2006) and Audrey Ovington (1914-2005) He was cremated and his ashes were scattered at sea.

See also

  • 1911 in aviation
  • Fred J. Wiseman, first airmail flight on February 18, 1911 from Petaluma to Santa Rosa
  • Dean Smith, pioneer air mail pilot

References

  • Ovington, Mrs. Adelaide Alexander, An Aviator's Wife, Dodd, Mead and company, 1920. Full text at archive.org.
  • Campbell, Robert D., Reminiscences of a Birdman, Living History Press, 2009.
  • Earle Lewis Ovington at Flickr
  • picture of Earle Lewis Ovington by photographer James Walter Collinge: last picture in gallery