~ IN MEMORY ~
NWA Capt. Elwood Jay Herman
February 18, 1921 ~ August 9, 2021
From our Northwest Airlines friends and colleagues, we have
learned of the passing of retired Northwest pilot Captain Elwood Jay Herman, age
100: “I have been informed by a good source that Captain Woodie Herman,
age 100, of Hayward, WI died yesterday, August 09, 2021. Woodie was born on
February 18, 1921 and was hired by NWA on December 24, 1942. Yes, hired on
Christmas Eve. Further details will be shared as they come available. One
hundred years, well done Woodie (Sir). “
A full
obituary will be posted on the RNPA website in the near future.
As more
news is received, we will pass along those updates.
Thank you,
~ Carol for the PCN
..................................
Elwood 'Woody' Herman
Elwood ‘Woody’ Jay Herman
1921 ~ 2021
Captain Elwood ‘Woody’ Jay Herman, age 100, died August 10,
2021 at home in New Auburn, WI. Woody was born in Montrose, MN on 2/18/1921 to
Alta Herman (Chafee) and Jay Herman. He was their only child.
Woody was raised in
Minneapolis, MN and attended Roosevelt High School where he played football. He
worked a paper route earning funds to buy a car and pay for flying lessons
during the very difficult ‘Depression’ years.
Together with his father, Woody, at only 16 years old, purchased a Piper
J-3 Cub. With this airplane he frequently barnstormed at county fairs, giving
rides for .05 per person to help pay for the plane. He acquired an instructor
rating in his late teens to become one of the youngest instructors in the US at
that time. Prior to WWII Woody instructed Army Air Corp students using the
PT-19 from southern Texas airbases.
He married
Geraldine Danielson in 1942, the same year he was hired by NWA on Dec. 24th.
This began a distinguished 39-year career with NWA.
Woody was a loving
father to Robert Herman (who predeceased him), Richard Herman, Doug Herman (who
also predeceased him) and Jill Ann Brodd (Herman). He taught all his children
to fly as well as numerous other extended family members. He frequently
chartered a DC-3 in which he flew friends from Minneapolis to Acapulco.
During the 1952 Eisenhower – Nixon campaign he flew Nixon in
the DC-3 as Nixon campaigned as VP candidate with Eisenhower.
In the early 1960’s Woody and Geraldine did a
base transfer to NWA’s pilot base at Seattle so Woody could fly trans-Pacific
routes to the orient. He took delight in ‘importing’ Japanese Mirouku shotguns
and became a budding entrepreneur. He furthered the entrepreneur desire by
amassing Continental A65 engine parts. always selling them on approval without
any money down - trusting his fellow aviators to a handshake deal. He taught
hundreds of students to fly, including many pilots who went on to become ATP’s.
In the 1970’s Woody operated a flight school for Japanese students on the big
island of Hawaii. He was a licensed flight instructor for over 65 years. He was
also an FAA flight examiner for private, commercial, instrument, seaplane,
multi engine, an airline transport.
It is little known
to most of his pilot colleagues that Woody was an excellent gin player. He even
once required a longtime opponent to pay off his numerous gin bets with a
6-month-old Cadillac. Woody enjoyed his retirement years at the Wisconsin
Herman Lake compound he shared with his extended family, where he taught his
grandkids and great grandkids to swim, shoot a 22 rifle, play cards and solo in
one of his airplanes. His seaplane hangar was a fixture on the lake with a J-3
and a PA-12 on floats. Occasionally his children water skied behind a float
plane. He spent many winters in Texas,
enjoying the warmer weather with friends and was always on the lookout for more
A65 parts, many of which are presently for sale.
Woody was an extremely
positive person and was often heard to say “no big deal” whenever anything
negative came his way. His two surviving children, six grandchildren, eight
great-grandchildren and seven great-great grandchildren all continue to share
the Herman compound today on Lower Long Lake at New Auburn, Wisconsin. Woody
boarded his last flight on August 10, 2021, and passed at the age of 100+ from
natural causes.
TYPE RATINGS:
B-377
B-707
B-720
B-747
DC-3
DC-4
DC-6
DC-7
B-26
L-49
L-188
M-202
M-404
OTHER KNOWN AIRCRAFT FLOWN:
Piper J-3
Piper PA-12
Citabria
Aerona Champ
Taylor Craft
Luscombe
Cessna 172
Cessna 180
Cessna 182
Cessna 150
Cessna 170
Cessna 210
Cessna 310
Republic RC-3 Seabee
Twin Beech E-18
Twin Beech D-18
Piper Warrior
Piper Aztec
Piper Twin Commanche
Douglas DC-3, making multiple trips to Acapulco
Beechcraft Baron
Aero Commander
Bellanca
Douglas A-26
B-17
Fairchild PT-26 trainers in Texas
Woody never bent an
airplane, other than once having to use a crash axe to reenter a locked DC-3
door while flying solo on a maintenance flight!
Submitted by - Joel Brodd (Son-In-Law)
NWA pilot comments: Comments regarding Woody’s passing are
extensive. I glean that he may have been the most popular ever NWA pilot.
Everyone sought to fly with Woody, super seniority was required to hold his
monthly schedule. One NWA pilot commented, “He taught me more than flying. He taught me how to be a human being. How to treat my fellow pilots and cabin
crew. I miss him but expect to see him
again. So long, Woody. I know you are probably teaching some angel
how to dress and be classy.”
This is a small sample of the many comments from those who
flew with Woody Herman. The following summarizes the consensus: “.....most NWA
pilots are good guys, but Woody was especially so.”
(- Bill Day)
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