Frank Henry Russell
Frank Henry Russell | |
---|---|
Born |
1878 Mansfield, Ohio |
Died |
1947 Newtown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania |
Known for | Pioneering in the fields of aviation and manufacture of the zipper |
Frank Henry Russell was an American aviation pioneer and the first General Manager of the Wright Brothers Company at Dayton, Ohio. He went on to co-found the Burgess Company and the Manufacturers Aircraft Association. He was the Vice President and a director of Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Company and a director of Curtiss-Wright Corporation.
Biography
Russell was born on July 17, 1879 in Mansfield, Ohio, to Reverend Frank Russell, Congregationalist minister and descendent of Reverend Noadiah Russell, and Aurelia Squire Henry Russell. He was graduated from Yale in 1900. He joined the Laurentide Paper Company of Quebec as Manager of Sales, but came to be recognized for ability in manufacturing management. He was recruited to be president of Automatic Hook & Eye Company, one of the predecessor companies of Talon Zipper, in Hoboken, New Jersey and held patents for processes in the manufacture of the zipper.
In 1908, the Wright brothers demonstrated their aeroplane in a flight over New York harbor. Russell witnessed the demonstration from the roof of his factory and sought to meet them. His cousin, Russell F. Alger, son of Russell A. Alger, a backer of the Packard Motor Company and of the Wrights, arranged the introduction. Russell joined the newly formed Wright Brothers Aeroplane Company as General Manager in 1910. Russell sold the first military aircraft to the US Army, which now hangs as an exhibit at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum.
In 1911, Russell joined in the formation of the Burgess Company, which had been manufacturing aircraft under license from Wright. Burgess was acquired by Curtiss in 1914 and Russell became the Vice President - General Manager, and a director of the Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Co., ultimately focusing his efforts at the experimental division on Long Island, New York. Curtiss-Wright was formed in 1929 by the merger of the two formerly rival companies and Russell became a director of the combined enterprise, as well as president of Curtiss Asset Corporation and Curtiss-Caproni, Inc. Some sources credit Russell with pioneering the designs for US fighter aircraft of World War II. In 1931, Russell moved to his farm in Bucks County, Pennsylvania in active retirement until his death there in 1948. He was a director of the Budd Company and focused his efforts on applying aircraft streamlining concepts to trains.
In 1917, Russell participated in the formation of the Manufacturers Aircraft Association and was elected its president, which he remained until his death. The industry association was created to mediate patent disputes between aircraft and component manufacturers that had been hampering American military preparedness during World War I. He was also a member of the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics.
Russell served as president of the Montauk Club and founding vice-commodore the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club on Long Island.
See also
References
- The Aircraft Year Book 1919
- Aerial Age, Volume 13 June 13, 1921. Who's Who in American Aviation, professional biography.
- Who's Who in American Aeronautics. 1922.
- Curtiss Company Report, 1929
- Smithsonian Institution exhibit record
- New York Times, 1 January 1930. "Frank H. Russell Quits Curtiss-Wright"
- Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 10 March 1938.
- Roach, Edward J. The Wright Company: From Invention to Industry. Ohio University Press, 2014.
- Gaffney, Timothy R. The Dayton Flight Factory: The Wright Brothers & the Birth of Aviation. The History Press. Charleston, 2014.
Collections
- The Frank Henry Russell papers, 1901-1947, at the University of Wyoming American Heritage Center. Includes biography.
- Frank Henry Russell papers, journals and photographs at the Smithsonian Institution, Garber Facility, Maryland.