In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager

In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager is the first volume in Passion for Flight, a series of short biographies (20,000 words or less) regarding notable pilots who inspire young and old alike to take to the skies.

Brig. Gen. Charles Elwood "Chuck" Yeager was the first person to break the sound barrier, on Oct. 14, 1947. After being shot down during World War II and evading capture, he successfully fought a rule that banned shot-down pilots from re-entering combat and eventually became a double ace. In 65 years in military cockpits, he flew at least 340 different makes and models of military airplanes, including the Air Force's entire inventory during World War II, as well as aircraft from Germany, France, England, Japan, Sweden and Russia.

In 1994, Yeager replaced actor Cliff Robertson as the chairman of the Experimental Aircraft Association's Young Eagles program. Under his leadership, the organization accomplished the successful mission of getting one million youth to fly at the controls by Dec. 17, 2003, the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first flight. Yeager himself has personally flown more than 500 Young Eagles, and the foundation has given more than $50,000 for the Young Eagles General Chuck Yeager Scholarship Endowment Program. After accomplishing his mission, Yeager turned over the reins to Harrison Ford, in 2004.

Gen. Yeager and his wife Victoria incorporated the General Chuck Yeager Foundation in 2002. The foundation supports programs that teach "honor, integrity, courage and excellence in our daily conduct, a strong sense of public service and duty to our country, and an intellectual curiosity."

Di Freeze interviewed Chuck Yeager for this short biography, and filled in facts with his autobiography, Yeager. Gen. Yeager reviewed and approved this approximately 11,000-word bio for accuracy. It contains vintage and present day photos. This is not meant to be a comprehensive history of Chuck Yeager's life, but it contains the major milestones in his aviation history.

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In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager

In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager is the first volume in Passion for Flight, a series of short biographies (20,000 words or less) regarding notable pilots who inspire young and old alike to take to the skies.

Brig. Gen. Charles Elwood "Chuck" Yeager was the first person to break the sound barrier, on Oct. 14, 1947. After being shot down during World War II and evading capture, he successfully fought a rule that banned shot-down pilots from re-entering combat and eventually became a double ace. In 65 years in military cockpits, he flew at least 340 different makes and models of military airplanes, including the Air Force's entire inventory during World War II, as well as aircraft from Germany, France, England, Japan, Sweden and Russia.

In 1994, Yeager replaced actor Cliff Robertson as the chairman of the Experimental Aircraft Association's Young Eagles program. Under his leadership, the organization accomplished the successful mission of getting one million youth to fly at the controls by Dec. 17, 2003, the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first flight. Yeager himself has personally flown more than 500 Young Eagles, and the foundation has given more than $50,000 for the Young Eagles General Chuck Yeager Scholarship Endowment Program. After accomplishing his mission, Yeager turned over the reins to Harrison Ford, in 2004.

Gen. Yeager and his wife Victoria incorporated the General Chuck Yeager Foundation in 2002. The foundation supports programs that teach "honor, integrity, courage and excellence in our daily conduct, a strong sense of public service and duty to our country, and an intellectual curiosity."

Di Freeze interviewed Chuck Yeager for this short biography, and filled in facts with his autobiography, Yeager. Gen. Yeager reviewed and approved this approximately 11,000-word bio for accuracy. It contains vintage and present day photos. This is not meant to be a comprehensive history of Chuck Yeager's life, but it contains the major milestones in his aviation history.

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In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager

In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager

by Di Freeze
In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager

In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager

by Di Freeze

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Overview

In the Cockpit with Chuck Yeager is the first volume in Passion for Flight, a series of short biographies (20,000 words or less) regarding notable pilots who inspire young and old alike to take to the skies.

Brig. Gen. Charles Elwood "Chuck" Yeager was the first person to break the sound barrier, on Oct. 14, 1947. After being shot down during World War II and evading capture, he successfully fought a rule that banned shot-down pilots from re-entering combat and eventually became a double ace. In 65 years in military cockpits, he flew at least 340 different makes and models of military airplanes, including the Air Force's entire inventory during World War II, as well as aircraft from Germany, France, England, Japan, Sweden and Russia.

In 1994, Yeager replaced actor Cliff Robertson as the chairman of the Experimental Aircraft Association's Young Eagles program. Under his leadership, the organization accomplished the successful mission of getting one million youth to fly at the controls by Dec. 17, 2003, the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first flight. Yeager himself has personally flown more than 500 Young Eagles, and the foundation has given more than $50,000 for the Young Eagles General Chuck Yeager Scholarship Endowment Program. After accomplishing his mission, Yeager turned over the reins to Harrison Ford, in 2004.

Gen. Yeager and his wife Victoria incorporated the General Chuck Yeager Foundation in 2002. The foundation supports programs that teach "honor, integrity, courage and excellence in our daily conduct, a strong sense of public service and duty to our country, and an intellectual curiosity."

Di Freeze interviewed Chuck Yeager for this short biography, and filled in facts with his autobiography, Yeager. Gen. Yeager reviewed and approved this approximately 11,000-word bio for accuracy. It contains vintage and present day photos. This is not meant to be a comprehensive history of Chuck Yeager's life, but it contains the major milestones in his aviation history.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940044485594
Publisher: Di Freeze
Publication date: 04/18/2013
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Di Freeze is the founder of Freeze Time Media, which offers writing, editing, formatting and publishing services for print and ebooks. Over the past few years she has edited and published books in the categories of self-help, children's, fiction (including historical), short stories, and commentaries.

Her aviation features are the basis for a series, Passion For Flight (In the Cockpit with...), geared towards inspiring young adults to fly. The first ten biographies are available as ebooks on Amazon and B&N. Volumes one through three — featuring Chuck Yeager, Bob Hoover and Cliff Robertson — are available on Amazon. Volumes four and five, featuring Barron Hilton and Clay Lacy, will be available in the near future.

Di co-wrote "From the Ground Up: From the Tractor to the Sabre," with Talmage E. Miller, a Colorado aviation sales pioneer.

In 2009 she wrote briefly for A Time To Love, an online relationship magazine. Her interviews included astronaut Charlie Duke, the Love Boat's Gavin MacCleod, and professional BMX racer Donny Robinson.

From 2000 to 2008, she was editor-in-chief for Airport Journals. She interviewed well-known aviators regularly for feature biographies for our print and online publications. Those interviews included Chuck Yeager, Bob Hoover, Tex Hill, Barron Hilton, Clay Lacy, Burt and Dick Rutan, Harrison Ford, Morgan Freeman, John Travolta, Patty Wagstaff, Sean Tucker, Gene Cernan, Bill Anders, Steven F. Udvar-Hazy, Steve Fossett, AL Ueltschi and many others.

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