Background
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Ueltschi was born and raised in Franklin County, Kentucky.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Ueltschi was born and raised in Franklin County, Kentucky.
Ueltschi attended the University of Kentucky for a year but dropped out and instead started a barnstorming career, eventually teaching student pilots at the Queen City Flying Service in Cincinnati.
On July 21, 2001, he was enshrined at Dayton, Ohio, in the National Aviation Hall of Fame class of 2001, along with test pilot Joe Engle, United States Marine Corps ace Marion Carl, and United States Air Force ace Robin Olds. In 2013, Flying magazine ranked Ueltschi number 13 on its list of the 51 heroes of aviation. He was the youngest of seven children of Robert and Lena Ueltschi.
At age 16, Ueltschi opened a hamburger stand named "Little Hawk" across from a White Castle near his high school in Frankfort, Kentucky to pay for flying lessons.
His first airplane, purchased using profits earned from Little Hawk, was a Waco 10. On one occasion, he survived falling out of his airplane while on an instruction flight, parachuting into a briar patch while his student landed safely on his own.
He began his career with Pan Am in 1941 as Juan Trippe"s private pilot, retiring in 1968 at the age of 50. He founded FlightSafety International in 1951 after noticing that corporate pilots did not receive the same rigorous training as airline pilots had.
His first endorsement came from Juan Trippe, the president of Pan American
He stepped down as President of FlightSafety in 2003, yet remained Chairman. The motto he started with still remains with FlightSafety today: "The best safety device in any aircraft is a well-trained crew."
He spent his winters in Vero Beach, Florida, but worked daily in the warmer months at FlightSafety"s headquarters at the Marine Air Terminal at LaGuardia Airport in Flushing, Queens, New New York Ueltschi helped launch and was a prolific contributor to Orbis International, a nonprofit, global development organization which operates a flying eye hospital (utilizing a specially equipped McDonnell Douglas District of Columbia-10) that offers sight-saving surgery and training to doctors around the world, and whose mission is to eliminate avoidable blindness in developing countries.
Berkshire Hathaway acquired FlightSafety in late 1996.
On September 18, 2012, Ueltschi signed The Giving Pledge, noting his commitment to cataract relief.