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LTC George L.
O'Grady
Army Aviation
Hall of Fame 2001 Induction

LTC George L.
O'Grady excelled both on the battlefield and in combining his
combat experience and engineering talent to improve equipment.
On his first
Vietnam tour he commanded the Cobras, the gun platoon of the 114th
Assault Helicopter Company. Almost daily, the Cobras were
committed to air assaults into base areas at night to protect
villages and outposts under attack. The Cobras became so well
known their call sign was given to the Army's first attack
helicopter. On his second tour he commanded B Troop, 1st Squadron,
9th Cavalry. His troop provided reconnaissance and long-range
patrols blocking three major infiltration routes leading south out
of Cambodia. His heroism was recognized by many awards, including
three Silver Stars, four Distinguished Flying Crosses, two Bronze
Stars and two Presidential Unit Citations - one for the 13th
Aviation Battalion and the other for the 1st of the 9th Cavalry.
Between and
following his combat tours, he drafted the Army's first field
manual on A Gunnery, helped set up the first instrumented
helicopter firing range at Fort Rucker and established the first
door gunner training program.
Hardware
innovations were a constant during O'Grady's aviation career. He
designed a flight helmet shield to block flare light, constructed
helicopter cargo door airflow adapters to reduce buffeting and
drag, modified an M-39 cannon for helicopters, performed
classified work on the Hellfire missile, redesigned the M-5
ammunition box, utilized the XM-3 smoke adaptor to load tear gas
grenades into the rocket system and applied a microphone sensing
system to develop a hostile fire indicator. He also developed a
Relative Wind Air Data System for more accurate rocketry and
smoother flight that is in use today on attack helicopters.
This master Army
aviator had 5,000 flight hours, of which 1,900 were combat.
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