John M. Miller III
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John Matthew Miller III (1896 – c. 1980's) was an American naval aviator, air mail pilot, transport pilot, autogiro pilot, flight instructor, aircraft manufacturer, airport operator, agricultural pilot, and helicopter test pilot. He worked for the United States Navy, the US Aerial Mail Service, Pitcairn Aircraft Company, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In 1927 Miller founded the Miller Aviation Corporation of New Brunswick, New Jersey which operated until 1929.


Life

Born John Matthew Miller III on 3 June 1896 in Tacoma, Washington. He studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) working summers at the aircraft manufacturer the Burgess Company in Marblehead, Massachusetts. As World War I raged, in 1917, Miller joined the Naval Aviation detachment at MIT. He started US Navy flight instruction at
Hampton Roads Hampton Roads is the name of both a body of water in the United States that serves as a wide channel for the James River, James, Nansemond River, Nansemond and Elizabeth River (Virginia), Elizabeth rivers between Old Point Comfort and Sewell's ...
, Virginia graduating to advanced flight instruction at Pensacola, Florida. On 16 March 1918, Miller commissioned as an Ensign and United States Naval Aviator. He patrolled near New York harbor while stationed at Naval Air Station Rockaway Beach, New York. After the armistice he was assigned inactive duty on December 15, 1918. During his two-year US Aerial Mail Service, Miller trained in the Wright DH-4 at
Belmont Park Belmont Park is a major thoroughbred horse racing facility in the northeastern United States, located in Elmont, New York, just east of the New York City limits. It was opened on May 4, 1905. It is operated by the non-profit New York Racin ...
, Long Island. Hired as the station manager at Bustleton, Pennsylvania he flew the first non-stop mail route between Cleveland and Chicago on 22 May 1919. In 1920, he worked for America Trans Oceanic Company of Miami, Florida. Miller flew survey flights in Quebec, Canada in 1922. He managed operations for Pitcairn Aeronautical Corporation at Hadley Field in South Plainfield, New Jersey.


Miller Aviation Corporation

On August 2, 1927, Miller founded the Miller Aviation Corporation at New Brunswick Airport (a.k.a. "Miller Field"), a short-lived airfield located southwest of the city. His company offered flying instruction, local sightseeing flights, and charter passenger flights in the mid-Atlantic seaboard region. In 1928 the Fowler flap inventor
Harlan D. Fowler Harlan D. Fowler (1895-1982) was an American inventor, writer, and airplane engineer who invented the variable wing area Fowler flap used on many commercial aircraft today. Fowler flap The Fowler flap combines a translation and a rotation. T ...
worked as Miller's chief aeronautical engineer. Later that year Robert W. Johnson of the Miller Aviation Corporation designed and constructed the Miller MCA-1 twin engine amphibian biplane. After successful water landings, the MCA-1 was damaged beyond repair, flipping over on its back, during the first ground landing, Miller was uninjured. Shortly after the accident his company dissolved and Miller returned to Pitcairn flying the PCA-2 autogiro. He was then hired to fly for the US Department of Agriculture until World War II. During the war, Miller joined the Navy as a Lieutenant Commander, flying as a helicopter test pilot at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland. He returned to the Department of Agriculture until his retirement in 1956.   Miller flew the Wright DH-4; the Curtis Seagull for The Chicago Tribune;
Pitcairn PA-3 Orowing The Pitcairn PA-3 Orowing is an early Pitcairn biplane designed for light commercial use in the early 1920s when aircraft production rates did not meet demand for airmail, training, and passenger aircraft. Development The Orowing was the first p ...
; his Miller Corporation MCA-1 Amphibian Biplane; and the autogiro
Pitcairn PCA-2 The Pitcairn PCA-2 was an autogyro (designated as "autogiro" by Pitcairn) developed in the United States in the early 1930s.Taylor 1989, p.735 It was Harold F. Pitcairn's first autogyro design to sell in quantity. It had a conventional design fo ...
. Documents of Miller's life from the 1914 to 1939 reside in the National Air and Space Museum Archives.


Reference section

{{DEFAULTSORT:Miller, John 1896 births People from Tacoma, Washington American aerospace engineers Aviation inventors 20th-century American inventors Aviation history of the United States Aviation pioneers Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni American manufacturing businesspeople 1980s deaths