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Bartram
Kelley
Army Aviation
Hall of Fame 1995 Induction

Bart
Kelley is one of the original and most outstanding pioneers of the
helicopter industry. After joining Arthur Young and Bell in 1941, his
engineering leadership was at the forefront of every new design at Bell
Helicopters for the next 35 years.
In the
course of Bart Kelley's tenure as senior engineer (Director of
Engineering; Senior Vice President, Engineering) with Bell Helicopter
Company, over 24,000 Bell helicopters were produced. By far the largest
part were delivered to the U.S. Army as the H-13 Sioux, UH-1 Iroquois,
AH-1G Cobra, OH-58 Kiowa, and XV-15. Mr. Kelley actively supervised the
design, test, and development of all Bell experimental and production
aircraft, and was accepted by his fellow engineers as clearly outstanding
in his field.
A
helicopter pilot himself, Bart Kelley was uncommonly sensitive to the
flyability of aircraft from the pilot's point of view. Through extensive
contact with the U.S. Army and its crewmen, he also became uniquely
responsive to military needs with respect to reliability and
maintainability.
Kelley's
Model 209 Cobra attack helicopter, the first in the world, was designed
and developed without government request or assistance during the Vietnam
War. After acceptance, it emerged as the AH-1 and was used extensively in
that war. In successive dash numbers, it is still used extensively by the
U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps and in several allied foreign countries.
Its basic configuration has been copied in later attack helicopter
designs.
Bart
Kelley also presided over the design of Bell's tilt-rotor aircraft, the
first experimental model which flew successfully and often in the 1950s
and early 60s, and which may well become the outstanding vertical take off
and landing aircraft of the future.
Bart
Kelley has designed aircraft which are flying in more than 70 countries,
the world over.
Possessed
not only of vast engineering expertise, Kelley has also exhibited an
unusually perceptive instinct for the practical and (in a complex field of
endeavor) the simple. In a word, he has exceptionally keen judgment as to
what works well and reliably and what doesn't.
His
distinguished service in the development of rotary wing aircraft led to
his Honorary Fellowships in the American Helicopter Society and the Royal
Aeronautical Society. After 35 years of service, Bart Kelley retired in
1975, but still serves as a consultant with Bell Helicopter Textron. |