Russell Maughan
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Russell Maughan served with distinction with the 139th Pursuit Squadron during World War I, shooting down four German aircraft. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation's second highest combat award. Winner of the 1922 National Air Races Pulitzer Race, he also won the 1923 Fairfield Race. Maughan was the first pilot to fly dawn-to-dusk, coast-to-coast on 23 June 1924. He was the Secretary of Aviation and Consultant to the Philippine Cabinet from 1930 to 1932 and surveyed and selected airfields for the first secret Ferry Routes through Greenland and Iceland to Great Britain during 1939. Maughan led both Troop Carrier and Bomber Groups on combat missions over Europe during World War II. He was a native of Logan, Utah.
Related Wikipedia articles: 1924 in aviation
This information is from the website Hill Aerospace Museum - Utah Aviation Hall of Fame - Colonel Russell Lowell Maughan USAF which web site "is provided as a public service by Hill Air Force Base. Information presented [there] is considered public information and may be distributed or copied."