Background
Leonard "Leo" Loudenslager was born 24 January 1944, the son of Harry Cameron Loudenslager and Margaret F (Kirkpatrick) Loudenslager.
Leonard "Leo" Loudenslager was born 24 January 1944, the son of Harry Cameron Loudenslager and Margaret F (Kirkpatrick) Loudenslager.
He completed building a Stephens Akro aerobatic plane in 1970 and competed in his first competition the next year.
The family resided in Columbus, Ohio. Loudenslager served in the Air Force as a B-52 mechanic. He was stationed at Travis Air Force Base in 1964 when he took leave to attend the first Reno Air Races, where he was inspired to become a pilot.
He took flying lessons at the Travis Air Force Base flight club, where one of his instructors was Dick Rutan.
In 1966, he joined American Airlines as a first officer He worked for them for the rest of his life.
A series of modifications to the plane, tail number N10LL, culminated in the rechristening of the plane as the Laser 200 in 1975. Loudenslager also flew in air shows, notably the Sussex Airshow at his home airport in Sussex County, New Jersey.
In addition to his Laser 200, he also flew a Bede Bachelor's Degree-5J.
Both aircraft were sponsored by Bud Light. In later years, Loudenslager"s base of operation was at Thompson"s Station, Tennessee, approximately 25 miles (40 km) from Nashville. Death and afterward
On June 28, 1997, a car crossed the center line and collided head-on with his motorcycle on United States. Route 31 near his home in Tennessee.
He died a month later in hospital at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Loudenslager"s plane, the Laser 200, was donated to the Smithsonian in 1999. lieutenant was on display at the National Air and Space Museum from October 2001 through April 2003 as part of the Aerobatic Champions temporary exhibit and has been on permanent display in the museum"s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center since December 2003.
Twenty members of the United States House of Representatives signed a letter objecting to the plane"s Bud Light emblems remaining on the plane, but the museum stood by its position of not altering artifacts except for repair. The International Council of Air Shows Foundation maintains a scholarship in his name, which is given in rotation to an enlisted member of the United States Navy Blue Angels, the United States Air Force Thunderbirds or the Canadian Forces Snowbirds to be used toward the cost of flight training.