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  1. Frederick Rentschler. Frederick Brant Rentschler (November 8, 1887 – April 25, 1956) was an American aircraft engine designer, aviation engineer, industrialist, and the founder of Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Rentschler created and manufactured many revolutionary aircraft engines, including those used in the aircraft of Charles Lindbergh, Amelia ...

  2. Frederick served as a Private in the 253rd Infantry Regiment, 63rd Infantry Division, U.S. Army during World War II. He resided in Baltimore County, Maryland prior to the war. He enlisted in the Army on August 22, 1944 in Baltimore, Maryland.

  3. Death: April 25, 1956. Enshrined: 1982. Helped form the Wright Aeronautical Corporation in 1909 and as president led the development of the “Whirlwind,” America’s first high-powered air-cooled radial aircraft engine used in record-setting flights in the 1920s and 30s.

  4. Dec 20, 2007 · Frederick Brant Rentschler (1887-1956) and Wasp No. 1 (1925-2007) His co-workers nicknamed him “Horsepower.” His remarkable career spanned more than 40 years, two world wars and the advent of...

  5. Dec 30, 2023 · Frederick Rentschler was central to the creation of the Wasp engine. With the U.S. Army Signal Corps in World War I, he had worked closely with Wright-Martin's Hispano-Suiza engines, also...

  6. Rentschler died April 25, 1956 at his winter home in Boca Raton, Florida. Legacy Pratt & Whitney's former company airfield, located in East Hartford, Connecticut, was named Rentschler Field in his honor. The airfield was decommissioned in 1995, and the land it was on was donated to the state of Connecticut in 1999.

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  8. Dec 26, 2014 · Frederick Rentschler and Igor Sikorsky, visionaries of aviation, came to Connecticut just a few years apart, each with a new idea that would revolutionize flying — Rentschler’s air-cooled,...

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