Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Theodore "Ted" Nieman Kincannon

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Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
Aviator

Other names
  
"Terry", "Ted"

Other name
  
"Terry", "Ted"

Born
  
August 16, 1896 (
1896-08-16
)
Boonsville, Texas, U.S.

Awards
  
Airmail Flyers' Medal of Honor (1937)

Died
  
29 January 1936, Frisco, Texas, United States

Award
  
Airmail Flyers' Medal of Honor (1937)

Theodore Nieman Kincannon was a pioneer of aviation, early Airline pilot, and one of only ten recipients of the Airmail Flyers' Medal of Honor.

Contents

He was born on the 16th of August 1896 in Boonsville, Texas, the only child of William Anderson Kincannon and Mary Bettie Barksdale.

College

Ted attended Polytechnic College in Fort Worth, now Texas Wesleyan University, in 1913 – 1914. When the campus was re-designated as a woman’s college Ted transferred to Southern Methodist University for studies 1915 – 1916. While attending SMU Ted played Baseball and managed the Basketball team.

The Army and learning to fly

Ted joined the Army and learned to fly in 1918. After his time in the Army he spent some time in Kentucky working for an Air Service company. In 1932 Ted went to work for American Airlines in the Dallas, Fort Worth area flying routes to St. Louis, El Paso, Amarillo, and Atlanta. He spent a short time in New Orleans as station manager. By September 1934 Ted was flying a new route from Dallas-Fort Worth to Chicago

Flight incident

A veteran of more than 8,100 hours in the air, Ted made his finally flight on 29 January 1936. On the last leg of his Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth via Oklahoma City, Oklahoma route Ted ran into a blinding snow storm. Only minutes from the destination, Love Field, the carburetor heater failed causing ice to build up and the aircraft began to lose power. Ted instructed the passengers to strap themselves in and began searching for an area to make a forced landing. He spotted a field, belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Grace, near Little Elm, Denton County and began circling while planning his descent. Ted cut the motor, to avoid a fire starting, and committed to his approach. Mr. Grace heard the plane passing over head and then the crash but was unable to see anything due to the blinding snow. Ted managed to get the plane down just 200 yards south of the Farm home and a mere nine miles from Love Field. Within a few minutes the five passengers managed to walk to the Grace home and call for help. Due to the weather and rural farm roads it took some time to get to the crash site. Ted was still strapped in his seat but had suffered a head wound from a piece of flying debris. His watch has stopped at 3:06, the time of the crash. He died in the ambulance on the way to Frisco. The five passengers, to include an American Airline Engineer, credited the pilot's skill with saving their lives.

The passengers were: M. P. Youker, Dallas. John Schultz, New York. T. P. Malloy, Shreveport, La. George Rice, San Antonio. William Littlewood, chief engineer, American Airlines, Chicago.

President Roosevelt presents award

On April 12, 1937 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt posthumously presented Sue Kincannon, Ted’s widow, with the Airmail Flyers Medal of Honor for his actions on January 29, 1936 when he landed his plane saving the lives of his passengers and the mail.

References

Theodore "Ted" Nieman Kincannon Wikipedia