Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Charles Fern

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full name
  
Charles J. Fern

Name
  
Charles Fern

Relatives
  
Charlie Fern, niece

Spouse
  
Mary Gillespie

Nationality
  
United States


Born
  
June 20, 1892 (
1892-06-20
)

Died
  
March 29, 1995(1995-03-29) (aged 102)

Known for
  
First round trip between O‘ahu and Maui

1 8 fs 57 kg a yatsenko ukr df d charles fern sri by fall 4 0


Charles J. "Charlie" Fern (June 20, 1892 – March 29, 1995), a barnstorming Hawaii aviator and newspaper pioneer, was a University of California, Berkeley graduate and a World War I pilot. Fern lived to be 102.

Contents

1 4 fs 61 kg d niyazbekov kaz df d charles fern sri by tf 10 0


Biography

Fern, who was raised in the Madison Barracks community in Sackets Harbor, New York, arrived in the Hawaiian Islands in 1919. With partner Ben Stoddard, they barnstormed in Honolulu at Kapi‘olani Park, where they flew passengers 10 minutes for $10 each. Fern’s plane, 20-gallon tank, two-cockpit, single-engine Jenny, was brought to the Islands on a Matson freighter. On February 1, 1920, Fern, who learned to fly in the Army Air Corps during World War I, carried the first paying passenger on an inter-island flight, giving him the distinction of being the first commercial pilot in Hawaii. In addition, on May 9, 1920, Fern made the first round trip between O‘ahu and Maui in the same plane and then flew on to Kaua‘i. He became known as “Mr. Kaua‘i" and was eventually inducted into the Hawaii Publishers Association Hall of Fame.

In 1927 he formed the first Kauai barefoot football league. In 1938 he built Kauai's first radio station, KOWY (renamed KTOH). During World War II, Fern published the Cow Eye Sentinel, a weekly paper for soldiers stationed on Kauai. Eventually he became owner of The Garden Island, where he worked for 44 years, but sold the paper and radio station when he retired to Honolulu in 1966.

Family

In 1922 Fern married Mary Gillespie. A son, Mike Fern, went on to become an editor at The Garden Island. A great-niece, Charlene "Charlie" Fern, nicknamed after him, also became a newspaper reporter, editor and, later, a White House speechwriter.

References

Charles Fern Wikipedia