Education
University of Notre Dame.
University of Notre Dame.
The first project he was assigned to as the project pilot was the F-8 Supercritical Wing project He flew its first flight on 9 March 1971 and that of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration AD-1 on 21 December 1979. He was project pilot on the TF-8A Supercritical Wing testbed and the AD-1.
He was co-project pilot on the F-8 Digital Fly-By-Wire Airplane, the 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft and performed digital electronic F-15 engine efficiency control tests.
On 26 November 1975, the X-24B dropped from the sky for the last time, piloted on its 36th flight by McMurtry. Tom co-piloted the 747 Carrier Aircraft as it transported the Space Shuttle Enterprise to its first launch on 12 August 1977.
McMurtry logged over 11,000 hours of flying time since earning his pilot"s wings in 1958. A graduate of the United States Naval Test Pilot School, he has flown many aircraft including the U-2, X-24B, F-8A, AD-1, YF-12C, F-104, and F-15.
McMurtry became chief research test pilot and then Chief of the Research Aircraft Division for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames-Dryden Flight Research Facility.
He eventually rose to be the Director for Flight Operations at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Dryden Flight Research Center. McMurtry has been honored with the Society of Experimental Test Pilots" Iven C. Kincheloe Award for his work with the AD-1 Oblique Wing Airplane Program in 1982 and received Presidential recognition with the rank of Meritorious Executive in the Senior Executive Service. He was also awarded three National Aeronautics and Space Administration Exceptional Service Medals and the Aerospace Walk of Honor.
Born in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on 4 June 1935, McMurtry attended elementary school in Rockville, Indiana, and received his Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame in June 1957.
A former United States. Navy pilot and graduate of the United States Naval Test Pilot School, National Academy of Sciences, USA Patuxent River, Maryland, McMurtry was a consultant for Lockheed Corporation before joining National Aeronautics and Space Administration in 1967. Since his retirement from National Aeronautics and Space Administration, McMurtry enjoys flying his WACO open cockpit biplane or Piper Cub.
In 2012 McMurtry was nominated for an award by the Screen Actors Guild. He was Wolfe Air"s lead Vectorvision pilot.