• Source: Oswald Watt Gold Medal
    • The Oswald Watt Gold Medal is an Australian aviation award named for Oswald Watt (1878–1921), a decorated pilot in World War I.
      It originated in 1921 after the death of Oswald Watt and is awarded for "A most brilliant performance in the air or the most notable contribution to aviation by an Australian or in Australia" by the Royal Federation of Aero Clubs of Australia. As it is awarded on merit it is not an annual award; between the award's creation and 1999 it had been awarded a total of 48 times. It was not awarded in the years 2000 - 2010.


      Recipients


      The recipients are:

      1921 Francis Stewart Briggs – flew from Melbourne to Brisbane and from Melbourne to Perth
      1922 Harry Turner Shaw – flew in a Farman Sport from Melbourne to Sydney and return in May 1922
      1923 No award

      1924 Flight Lieutenant Ivor McIntyre – pilot of a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Fairey IIID configured as a floatplane in the first circumnavigation of Australia by air; departing from RAAF Point Cook, Victoria on 6 April 1924 and landing on St. Kilda Beach 44 days later
      1925 E. J. Jones – flew from Melbourne to Normanton in north-west Queensland and back to Melbourne
      1926 Flight Lieutenant Ivor McIntyre – second award; pilot on a flight with Wing Commander (later Air Marshal) Richard Williams from RAAF Point Cook (now RAAF Williams) near Melbourne to the Solomon Islands and return
      1927 Bert Hinkler – flew non-stop from London to Latvia as part of a business trip
      1928 Bert Hinkler – second award; flew from England to Australia
      1929 Sir Charles Kingsford Smith
      1930 Sir Charles Kingsford Smith – second award
      1931 Bert Hinkler – third award
      1932 Bert Hinkler – fourth award
      1933 Sir Charles Kingsford Smith – third award
      1934 Sir Charles Kingsford Smith – fourth award
      1935 Harry Frank (Jim) Broadbent
      1936 Edgar Percival
      1937 Dr. Clyde Fenton
      1938 Don Bennett
      1939-45 No awards
      1946 Don Bennett – second award
      1947 Squadron Leader Harold Brownlow Martin
      1948-49 No awards
      1950 Martin Warner – inadvertently set a British Empire altitude record for a glider of 23,500 feet (7,160 m) after he flew a Slingsby T.25 Gull 4 into a cloud and it was caught in an updraft
      1951 Patrick Gordon Taylor
      1952 Squadron Leader P. G. Fisher
      1953 Wing Commander Derek "Jell" Cuming
      1954 Mervyn Waghorn
      1955-56 No awards
      1957 Sir Donald Anderson
      1958 Squadron Leader D. W. Leckie
      1959 A. E. Chadwick
      1960 Brigadier Guy N. Moore
      1961 No award
      1962 Henry Millicer
      1963 No award
      1964 Edward Connellan – founder of Connellan Airways in 1939
      1965 No award
      1966 Harry Schneider
      1967 Sir Hudson Fysh – founder of Qantas in 1921
      1968 No award
      1969 George Alfred (Peter) Lloyd
      1970-72 No awards
      1973 Sir Norman Brearley – founder of West Australian Airways in 1921
      1974 Sir Lawrence Wackett
      1975 Sir Reg Ansett – founder of Ansett in 1935
      1976 Clive Canning – flew a Thorp T-18 that he had built himself from Melbourne to London and return; his arrival in London on 1 July completed the first Australia-England flight in a homebuilt aircraft


      1977 Horrie Miller – founder of MacRobertson Miller Airlines in 1927
      1978 No award
      1979 Bill Moyes
      1980-82 No awards
      1983 Dick Smith
      1984-87 No awards
      1988 Ian Honnery
      1989-91 No awards
      1992 Chris Dewhirst – the first person to fly a balloon over Mount Everest
      1993 George "Scotty" Allan
      1994 No award
      1995 Jon Johanson – flew around the world in a Van's RV-4 two seat homebuilt aircraft that he had built himself, leaving Adelaide's Parafield Airport on 26 June 1995 and arriving back at Parafield on 4 September 1995
      1996 Shirley Adkins
      1997 Bernie Sarroff
      1998 Dr Andrew (Andy) Thomas – Australian-born NASA astronaut who was stationed on Mir Space Station for 141 days from January to June 1998; and was on Space Shuttle missions STS-77, STS-89/STS-91 (to and from Mir), STS-102 and STS-104
      1999 Paul D. Scully-Power
      2000-2010 No awards
      2011 Squadron Leader Paul Simmons
      2012 John W. Dickenson – "for a most notable contribution to Aviation by an Australian for his invention of the modern Hang Glider and making improvements in flight safety"
      2013 Marj Davis Gillespie – "her voluntary contribution of sixteen years to the Royal Federation of Aero Clubs of Australia, the Flying Training Industry and General Aviation"
      2014 Air Chief Marshal Sir Angus Houston – awarded for his work as head of the Joint Agency Coordination Centre, set up to oversee the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370; and as Australia's Special Envoy to Ukraine after the crash in Ukraine of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
      2015 no award
      2016 George Alfred (Peter) Lloyd – second award; "for continued and valuable service to the Aviation Industry and in particular the safety of aviation"
      2017-2018 no awards


      See also


      List of aviation awards


      References



      AFC website list of Oswald Watts Gold Medal recipients retrieved 2007-08-21.
      Johanson, Jon (1997). Aiming High: The Little Australian Built to Fly the World. Kent Town, SA: Wakefield Press. ISBN 1-86254-424-7.
      Royal Federation of Aero Clubs of Australia

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