Background
Bettis was born on January 2, 1893 in Carsonville, Michigan to John C. Bettis and Mattie Crorey.
Bettis was born on January 2, 1893 in Carsonville, Michigan to John C. Bettis and Mattie Crorey.
He died after he crashed his aircraft less than a year later. Cyrus was brought up on a farm, and after high school he worked for a telephone company. He joined the army in 1918.
In winning the trophy, he set a new airspeed record of 248.99 mph for a closed-circuit race.
The record was broken shortly after by Lieutenant Jimmy Doolittle. On August 23, 1926, he was leading a formation of three army planes leaving the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia heading toward Selfridge Field in Michigan when in heavy fog he hit a tree and crashed on Jacks Mountain near Bellefonte, Pennsylvania.
He was seriously injured, including two broken legs, and after waiting in vain for rescue he crawled two-and-a-half miles to a road where he was found by highway workers. He was admitted to Bellefonte Hospital and then airlifted to Walter Reed Hospital in Washington where he was expected to recover, but he died on September 1, 1926 of spinal meningitis.
Bettis Field in Pittsburgh was named in his honor.
When Westinghouse bought the site in the 1948 and closed the airfield, they named their Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory after him.