Tag Archives: Bell X-1D

22 August 1953

Lieutenant Colonel Frank K. Everest, USAF, rides in the nose of a Boeing EB-50D Superfortress mothership before a rocketplane flight. He is wearing a David Clark Co. capstan-type partial pressure suit with a K-1 helmet. This scene was portrayed by William Holden in Toward The Unknown". (LIFE Magazine via jet Pilot Overseas)
Lieutenant Colonel Frank K. Everest, USAF, rides in the nose of a Boeing EB-50D Superfortress mothership before a rocketplane flight. He is wearing a T-1 capstan-type partial-pressure suit with a K-1 helmet. This scene was portrayed by William Holden in “Toward The Unknown”. (LIFE Magazine via Jet Pilot Overseas)

22 August 1953: After one successful glide flight with Bell Aircraft Corporation test pilot Skip Ziegler, the X-1D rocketplane, serial number 48-1386, was scheduled for its first powered flight with the Air Force project officer, Lieutenant Colonel Frank Kendall (“Pete”) Everest.

Bell X-1D 48-1386. (Bell Aircraft Corp./U.S. Air Force)
Bell X-1D 48-1386. (Bell Aircraft Corp./U.S. Air Force)

The Bell X-1D was one of four second-generation X-1 rocketplanes, each designed and built to investigate a different area of supersonic flight. The X-1D was instrumented for aerodynamic heating research.

A Boeing EB-50D Superfortress carries the Bell X-1D. (Edwards Flight Test.com)
The Boeing EB-50A Superfortress carries the Bell X-1D. The band of white frost around the rocketplane’s fuselage shows the location of the liquid oxygen tank. (EdwardsFlightTest.com)
A Boeing EB-50D Superfortress carries the Bell X-1D at high altitude. (U.S. Air Force)
The Boeing EB-50A Superfortress carries a Bell X-1 at high altitude. (U.S. Air Force)

After being carried to altitude by the Boeing EB-50A Superfortress mothership, Pete Everest saw that the rocketplane’s nitrogen pressure was dropping. (Pressurized nitrogen was used to push the ethyl alcohol/liquid oxygen propellant to the Reaction Motors XLR11-RM-5 engine.) With insufficient pressure, the X-1D’s flight had to be cancelled. Everest tried to jettison the fuel so that a landing could be made safely. There was an internal explosion.

Fearing that a larger explosion or fire would jeopardize the bomber and its crew, Everest abandoned the X-1D, climbing up into the bomber. The X-1 was then dropped. It crashed onto the desert floor and exploded.

Wreckage of Bell X-1D 48-1386. (U.S. Air Force)
Wreckage of Bell X-1D 48-1386. (U.S. Air Force)

At first it was assumed that vapors from a fuel leak had exploded from contact with an electrical source inside the rocketplane. There had been three similar explosions which resulted in the destruction of the X-1A, X-1-3 and the number two Bell X-2. That explosion, which occurred while the X-2 was on a captive test flight near the Bell Aircraft Corporation Factory, Buffalo, New York, 12 May 1953, killed test pilot Skip Ziegler and flight test engineer Frank Wolko aboard the B-29 mothership.

Investigators discovered that leather gaskets which were used in the rocketplanes’ fuel systems had been treated with tricresyl phospate (TCP). When this was exposed to liquid oxygen, an explosion could result. The leather gaskets were removed from the other rocketplanes and the explosions stopped.

Colonel Everest’s close call was dramatized in the 1956 Toluca Productions motion picture, “Toward The Unknown,” which starred Academy Award-winning actor William Holden as “Major Lincoln Bond,” a fighter pilot, test pilot and former prisoner of war, all of which could describe Pete Everest.

Major Frank K. Everest, U.S. Air Force gives some technical advice to William Holden ("Major Lincoln Bond") with Bell X-2 46-674, on the set of "Toward The Unknown", 1956.
Major Frank K. Everest, U.S. Air Force, gives some technical advice to William Holden (“Major Lincoln Bond”) with Bell X-2 46-674, on the set of “Toward The Unknown”, 1956. (bellx-2.com)

Frank Kendall (“Pete”) Everest, Jr., was born 10 August 1920, at Fairmont, Marion County, West Virginia. He was the first of two children of Frank Kendall Everest, an electrician, and Phyllis Gail Walker Everest. He attended Fairmont Senior High School, Fairmont, West Virginia, graduating in 1938, and then Fairmont State Teachers College where he was a member of the Tau Beta Iota (ΤΒΙ) fraternity. Everest also studied engineering at the University of West Virginia in Morgantown.

Pete Everest enlisted as an aviation cadet in the United States Army Air Corps at Fort Hayes, Columbus, Ohio, 7 November 1941, shortly before the United States entered World War II. His enlistment records indicate that he was 5 feet, 7 inches (1.70 meters) tall and weighed 132 pounds (60 kilograms). Everest graduated from pilot training and was commissioned as a second lieutenant, Air Reserve, 3 July 1942.

Lieutenant Everest married Miss Avis June Mason in Marion County, West Virginia, 8 July 1942. They would have three children, Frank, Vicky and Cindy.

Lieutenant Everest was appointed first lieutenant, Army of the United States (A.U.S.), 11 November 1942. He was assigned as a Curtiss-Wright P-40 Warhawk fighter pilot. Everest flew 94 combat missions with the 314th Fighter Squadron, 324th Fighter Group, in North Africa, Sicily and Italy. He was credited with shooting down two Luftwaffe Junkers Ju-52 transports, 18 April 1943, and damaging a third. Everest was promoted to the rank of captain, A.U.S., 17 August 1943.

Pete Everest with his Curtiss-Wright P-40 Warhawk, North Africa, 1943. (West Virginia State Archives)

In 1944, Captain Everest was returned to the United States to serve as a flight instructor. He requested a return to combat and was then sent to the China-Burma-India theater of operations, commanding the 17th Provisional Fighter Squadron at Chenkiang (Zhenjiang), China, where he flew 67 missions in the North American P-51 Mustang, and shot down four Japanese airplanes. He was himself shot down by ground fire in May 1945. Everest was captured by the Japanese and suffered torture and inhumane conditions before being freed at the end of the war. He was promoted to the rank of major, A.U.S., 1 July 1945. He was returned to the control of the United States military 3 October 1945.

After the war, Major Everest was assigned as a test pilot at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, before going west to the Air Force Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force Base, California.

Everest’s permanent rank was advanced from second lieutenant, Air Reserve, to first lieutenant, Air Corps, 19 June 1947, with date of rank retroactive to 3 July 1945.

At Edwards, Pete Everest was involved in nearly every flight test program, flying the F-88, F-92, F-100 (he flew the YF-100A prototype to an FAI world speed record, 29 October 1953 ¹), F-101, F-102, F-104 and F-105 fighters, the XB-51, YB-52, B-57 and B-66 bombers. He also flew the pure research aircraft, the “X planes:” the X-1, X-1B, X-2, X-3, X-4 and X-5. Pete Everest flew the Bell X-1B to Mach 2.3, and he set an unofficial world speed record with the Bell X-2 at Mach 2.87 (1,957 miles per hour, 3,150 kilometers per hour), which earned him the title, “The Fastest Man Alive.” He was the pilot on thirteen of the twenty X-2 flights.

Major Frank Kendall Everest, Jr., U.S. Air Force, with the Bell X-2 supersonic research rocketplane, on Rogers Dry Lake at Edwards AFB, California, 1955. (U.S. Air Force)

Frank Everest returned to operational assignments in March 1957, commanding the 461st Fighter Squadron, 36th Fighter Wing, equipped with the F-100 Super Sabre, at Hahn Air Base, Germany. Later, Colonel Everest commanded the 4453rd and 4520th Combat Crew Training Wings, and was assigned staff positions at the Pentagon. On 20 November 1963, Colonel Everest, commanding the 4453rd Combat Crew Training Squadron, flew one of the first two operational McDonnell F-4C Phantom II fighters from the factory in St. Louis to MacDill Air Force Base, Florida.

On 1 November 1965, Pete Everest was promoted to the rank of brigadier general. Between 1966 and 1972, General Everest flew 32 combat missions over Southeast Asia.

He served as commander of the Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Service from 1970 to 1973. He retired from the Air Force 1 March 1973 after 33 years of service. Pete Everest later worked as a test pilot for Sikorsky Aircraft.

During his military career, General Everest was awarded the Air Force Distinguished Service Medal; Legion of Merit with two oak leaf clusters (three awards); Distinguished Flying Cross with two oak leaf clusters (three awards); Purple Heart; Air Medal with one silver and two bronze oak leaf clusters (seven awards); Air Force Commendation Medal with one oak leaf cluster (two awards); Presidential Unit Citation with two bronze oak leaf clusters (three awards); Air Force Gallant Unit Citation; Prisoner of War Medal; American Campaign Medal; European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign medal with four bronze stars; Asiatic-Pacific campaign Medal with two bronze stars; World War II Victory Medal; national Defense Service Medal; Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal; Vietnam Service Medal; Air Force Longevity Service Award with one silver and two bronze oak leaf clusters (eight awards); Air Force Small Arms Expert Marksmanship Ribbon; and the Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal with 1960– device. General Everest was rated as a Command Pilot, and a Basic Parachutist.

Brigadier General Frank Kendall Everest, Jr., United States Air Force, died at Tucson, Arizona, 1 October 2004, at the age of 84 years.

Bell X-2 46-674 is airdropped from the EB-50D Superfortress, 48-096. U.S. Air Force)
Brigadier General Frank Kendall Everest, Jr., United States Air Force

¹ FAI Record File Number 8868: World Record for Speed Over a Straight 15/25 Kilometer Course, 1,215.298 kilometers per hour (755.151 miles per hour)

© 2017, Bryan R. Swopes

12 May 1953

Jean L. "Skip" Ziegler, with the Bell X-5 at Edwards Air Force Base, 1952. (LIFE Magazine via Jet Pilot Overseas.
Jean LeRoy “Skip” Ziegler, with the Bell X-5 at Edwards Air Force Base, 1951. (LIFE Magazine)

12 May 1953: A Boeing B-50A-5-BO Superfortress, 46-011, modified to carry a Bell X-2 supersonic research rocketplane, was engaged in a captive test flight at 30,000 feet (9,144 meters) over Lake Ontario, between Canada and the United States. The number two X-2, 46-675, was in the bomb bay.

The bomber was equipped with a system to keep the X-2’s liquid oxygen tank filled as the cryogenic oxidizer boiled off. With Bell’s Chief of Flight Research, test pilot Jean Leroy (“Skip”) Ziegler, in the bomb bay above the X-2, the system operation was being tested.

There was an explosion. The X-2 fell from the bomber and dropped into Lake Ontario, between Trenton, Ontario, Canada, and Rochester, New York, U.S.A. Skip Ziegler and an engineer aboard the bomber, Frank Wolko, were both lost. A technician, Robert F. Walters, who was in the aft section of the B-50 with Wolko, was badly burned and suffered an injured eye.

The B-50’s pilots, William J. Leyshon and David Howe, made an emergency landing at the Bell Aircraft Corporation factory airport at Wheatfield, New York (now, the Niagara Falls International Airport, IAG). The bomber was so heavily damaged that it never flew again.

Heavy fog over the lake hampered search efforts. Neither the bodies of Ziegler and Wolko or the wreckage of the X-2 were ever found.

A Bell X-2 rocketplane is loaded aboard the Boeing B-50A Superfortress "mothership," 46-011. (U.S. Air Force)
A Bell X-2 rocketplane is loaded aboard the Boeing B-50A-5-BO Superfortress “mothership,” 46-011. (U.S. Air Force)

After a series of explosions of early rocketplanes, the X-1A, X-1-3, X-1D and the X-2,  investigators discovered that leather gaskets which were used in the fuel system had been treated with tricresyl phosphate (TCP). When this was exposed to liquid oxygen an explosion could result. The leather gaskets were removed from the other rocketplanes and the explosions stopped.

The X-2 was a joint project of the U.S. Air Force and NACA (the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics, the predecessor of NASA). The rocketplane was designed and built by Bell Aircraft Corporation of Buffalo, New York, to explore supersonic flight at speeds beyond the capabilities of the earlier Bell X-1 and Douglas D-558-II Skyrocket. Two X-2s were built.

In addition to the aerodynamic effects of speeds in the Mach 2.0–Mach 3.0 range, engineers knew that the high temperatures created by aerodynamic friction would be a problem, so the aircraft was built from stainless steel and K-Monel, a copper-nickel alloy.

The Bell Aircraft Corporation X-2 was 37 feet, 10 inches (11.532 meters) long with a wingspan of 32 feet, 3 inches (9.830 meters) and height of 11 feet, 10 inches (3.607 meters). Its empty weight was 12,375 pounds (5,613 kilograms) and loaded weight was 24,910 pounds (11,299 kilograms).

The X-2 was powered by a throttleable two-chamber Curtiss-Wright XLR25-CW-1 rocket engine that produced 2,500–15,000 pounds of thrust (11.12–66.72 kilonewtons)

Boeing EB-50D Superfortress 48-096 with a Bell X-2 (U.S. Air Force)

Rather than use its limited fuel capacity to take off and climb to altitude, the X-2 was dropped from a modified heavy bomber as had been the earlier rocketplanes.

The launch altitude was 30,000 feet (9,144 meters). After the fuel was exhausted, the X-2 glided to a touchdown on Rogers Dry Lake at Edwards Air Force Base.

The X-2 reached a maximum speed of Mach 3.196 (2,094 miles per hour/3,370 kilometers per hour) and maximum altitude of 126,200 feet (38,466 meters).

Bell X-2 46-675 on its transportation dolly at Edwards Air Force Base, California, 1952. (NASA)
Bell X-2 46-675 on its transportation dolly at Edwards Air Force Base, California, 1952. (NASA)

Jean LeRoy Ziegler was born 1 January 1920 at Endeavor, Pennsylvania. He was the first of three sons of LeRoy Curtiss (“Lee”) Ziegler, a stationary engineer for a gas field, and Daisy Pearl Gesin Zeigler.

Ziegler attended Endeavor High School, and then studied at Pennsylvania State College for two years.

Jean LeRoy Ziegler, circa 1940. (Niagara Aerospace Museum)

During the last week of June 1940, Ziegler enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps. He was sent to the Alabama Institute of Aeronautics at Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for Phase 1 primary flight training. He then went on to advanced training at Maxwell Army Air Field, near Montgomery, Alabama. Upon graduation, Ziegler was commissioned as a second lieutenant, 7 February 1941.

Lieutenant Ziegler was assigned to Patterson Field, Fairfield, Ohio, as at transport pilot.

In September 1941, Lieutenant Ziegler, a reserve officer, was released from active duty. He was then employed by Pan American Airways-Africa, Limited. On 26 September 1941, he departed Ohio for New York, and from there traveled to Africa for a six-month assignment.

Pan American Airways-Africa, Limited, routes

Ziegler flew the Douglas DC-3 for Pan Am in Africa and the Middle East, India, Burma and China. He is credited with being one of the first three pilots to fly cargo from Burma to China over the Himalaya Mountains, a route that would be know as “The Hump.” He flew ammunition and fuel to the American Volunteer Group (better known as the “Flying Tigers”) in China, and returned with Chinese refugees.

On 10 June 1942, Ziegler returned to the United States, arriving in Miami, Florida, via Port of Spain, Trinidad, aboard a Pan American Airways Boeing 314A, NC18612, Cape Town Clipper. (This was the last Model 314 built by Boeing.)

Boeing 314A NC18612, Clipper Cape Town. (David J. Gauthier Collection, 1000aircraftphotos.com)

After a few months, Ziegler was hired by the Curtiss-Wright Corporation, Airplane Division, as a production test pilot. He was assigned to Plant 2 at Cheektowaga, New York. He would fly the P-40 Warhawk and SB2C Helldiver.

Curtiss Gets Another New Test Aviator

Military Supply Pilot Joins Buffalo Staff

    Jean L. Ziegler of Endeavor, Pa., who flew hundreds of refugees into India when the Japs swarmed through Burma last year, has been added to the production test pilot staff of the Curtiss-Wright Corporation Airplane Division in Buffalo.

     The 22-year-old flier is the second to join Curtiss here within a week. Donald Armstrong, 22, former flight lieutenant in the Royal Canadian Air Force, reported last week.

Graduate of Army School

     Ziegler entered the Army Flying School at Maxwell Field, Ala., in June 1940, and was graduated from the advanced course a year later. He was transferred to a transport unit at Patterson Field, O., where he remained until September, 1941. Then he was hired by Pan American Airways to serve as a pilot on military supply routes of the transport ferry command in Africa, India, the Middle East, China and Burma.

     When the Japs began an intensive drive toward the north in Burma, Ziegler was on of the airmen who volunteered to fly refugees into India. He carried fuel and ammunition to Burma units of the American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers) and came out with plane loads of men women and children. The planes used were Douglas DC-3s.

     Ziegler was born in Franklin, Pa., and attended Pen State for two years before enrolling at Maxwell Field. He holds a second lieutenant’s commission in the Army Air Corps Reserve.

Buffalo Courier Express, Vol. CVIII, No. 99, Tuesday 27 October 1942, Page 7 Column 1 and 2

On 22 December 1942, Ziegler registered for Selective Service (conscription). His draft card describes him as 6 feet, 1 inch (185 centimeters) tall, 170 pounds (77 kilograms), with brown hair, gray eyes, and a ruddy complexion.

Motor Trouble caused Test Pilot Jean L. Ziegler to crash land a Curtiss-Wright P-40 at the municipal airport Friday afternoon. He was unhurt. The plane was damaged slightly. Gasoline in an auxiliary tank ignited but firemen of Engine 27 quickly put out the flames.

Buffalo Evening News, Vol CXXV, No. 93, Saturday, 30 January 1943, Page 3, Column 3

At 4:00 p.m., 13 March 1943, Jean LeRoy Ziegler married Miss Flora Mae Thompson at the Endeavor Presbyterian Church, in their hometown of Endeavor, Pennsylvania. The ceremony was officiated by Reverend Taylor. Miss Thompson was a fellow student at Endeavour High School. She was trained as a nurse at the Millard Fillmore Hospital in Buffalo, New York. At the time of their marriage, she had been employed there for one year. The couple would have three daughters, Sandra, Patricia, and Mary.

Skip Ziegler’s Curtiss-Wright XP-40Q-2A-CU, NX300B (ex-USAAF P-40K-1-CU 45-45722), circa September 1947. (Military Matters)

On 1 September 1947, Skip Ziegler was involved in an interesting incident at the National Air Races in Cleveland, Ohio. Flying his Curtiss-Wright XP-40Q-2A-CU Warhawk, NX300B, he had qualified in thirteenth place for the twelve airplane field in the Thompson Trophy Race. But a faster airplane, NACA test pilot Howard Clifton  “Tick” Lilly’s Bell P-63A-7-BE King Cobra, NX69901 (42-69063), flown by William Bour, which had qualified, was also in earlier race. With only ten minutes between the two races, starters thought that P-63 might not be ready in time for the start of the Thompson. They allowed Ziegler to take the seventh place in the starting lineup.

Bour did make it to the starting line in time, but officials failed to tell Ziegler to withdraw. The twelve-airplane race started with thirteen airplanes.

During the fourteenth lap of the twenty-lap race, Ziegler was in fourth place when the engine of his XP-40Q caught fire. He bailed out in front of the viewing grandstands and parachuted to the ground, suffering a broken leg. His airplane crashed and was destroyed. (This was the second crash during the race. Only six airplanes finished.) Cook Cleland won the Thompson Trophy with his #74 Goodyear F2G-2 Corsair, N5577N (Bu. No. 88463).

By 1949, Ziegler and his family had moved to Los Angeles, California, where he was employed as a test pilot for North American Aviation, Inc. On 26 September 1949, he took off from Vultee Field, Downey, California, on the first flight of the XT-28, 48-1371, the first of two prototype trainers for the U. S. Air Force. This would go into production as the T-28A Trojan.

XT-28 48-1471 landing at Edwards AFB 3 Feb 1950
The first of two prototype North American Aviation XT-28s, 48-1371, lands at Edwards Air Force Base, 3 February 1950. (U.S. Air Force)

On 1 October 1950, Ziegler became the chief test pilot for the Bell Aircraft Corporation. He was involved in testing Bell’s experimental aircraft at Edwards Air Force Base in California.

On 20 June 1951, he took the experimental variable-sweep Bell X-5, 50-1838, for its first flight. Ziegler would deploy the X-5’s variable sweep wings in flight for the first time on 27 July 1951.

The Bell X-5 had variable sweep wings. (U.S. Air Force 151021-F-DW547-002)

Three days earlier, 24 July 1951, Ziegler made the first glide flight in the new Bell X-1D, 48-1386. This was a second-generation supersonic rocketplane built of the Air Force. This research aircraft was instrumented for the investigation of aerodynamic heating. Its nose gear was damaged on landing. This would be the X-1D’s only successful free flight. On 22 August 1951, following an internal explosion, it was jettisoned from its EB-50A mother ship and destroyed on impact with the desert floor.

Bell X-1D 48-1386. (Bell Aircraft Corporation)

On 8 October 1951, Ziegler made the twentieth and final contractor’s flight of the X-5 before turning over to its Air Force test pilot, Major Frank Kendall (“Pete”) Everest.

On 27 June 1952, Ziegler made the first glide flight of the new, swept-wing Bell X-2 Mach 3 research rocketplane. The second X-2, 46-675, was the first of the two to fly.

Bell X-2 46-675 after nose gear collapsed on landing at Edward Air Force Base, California, 27 June 1952. Bell Aircraft Corporation test pilot Jean Leroy (“Skip”) Zielgler is still seated in the cockpit. (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Armstrong Flight Research Center, E-749)

On 14 February 1953, the Bell X-1A, 48-1387, made its first first powered flight with Skip Ziegler in the cockpit. The X-1A, like the X-1D, was a second second generation version of the X-1 series. Originally ordered by the Air Force, it had been taken over by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). Delays caused by a redesign of the fuel system and lack of funding resulted in it being competed three years behind schedule.

Bell X-1A 46-1384 (U.S. Air Force)

Ziegler demonstrated the successful operation of the X-1A with all four chambers of its Reaction Motors XLR-11-RM-5 rocket engine on 26 March 1953. During a flight on 10 April 1953, Ziegler encountered a low-frequency vibration in its elevators, limiting the rocketplane to 0.93 Mach. During another flight on 25 April 1953, the X-1A’s fuel system turbopump oversped. Ziegler shut down the rocket engine and jettisoned the remaining fuel before gliding to a landing.

As described above, Jean LeRoy Ziegler was killed on 13 May 1953 as a result of an internal explosion of the second Bell X-2. His body was never recovered.

© 2025, Bryan R. Swopes