Quick Facts
Pilot: Captain Charles E. “Chuck” Yeager, USAAF
Aircraft: Bell X-1 “Glamorous Glennis” (serial 46-062)
Date: October 14, 1947
Speed Achieved: Mach 1.05 (700 mph / 1,127 km/h)
Altitude: 45,000 feet (13,700 m)
Location: Muroc Army Air Field (now Edwards AFB), California
Secret Injury: Two broken ribs, sustained 48 hours before the flight
The Broomstick Solution
The X-1 had a design problem that most pilots never thought about: its cockpit hatch. To seal the hatch from inside, the pilot had to hold it in position with one hand and slam down a heavy locking lever with the other — using the right arm. With two broken ribs on his right side, Yeager could not generate the force needed to close it. Ridley’s solution was pure test-pilot ingenuity. He went to a hardware store, bought a broomstick, and sawed off a ten-inch section. The sawed-off handle could be used as a lever extension, giving Yeager enough mechanical advantage to slam the hatch shut without having to fully extend his broken ribs. It was crude. It was brilliant. And it worked.
Through the Wall
At 10:26 AM, the B-29 released the X-1 at 25,000 feet over the Mojave Desert. Yeager fired the rocket chambers one by one, pushing the aircraft through Mach 0.83, then 0.92, then 0.96. As the X-1 approached the sound barrier, the controls began to shake violently — the buffeting that engineers had predicted and that some believed would destroy the aircraft. Yeager pushed through it. At 45,000 feet, the Mach needle jumped past 1.0 and kept climbing. The buffeting stopped. The ride smoothed out. The X-1 was flying at Mach 1.05 — 700 miles per hour — and below, across the dry lakebed at Muroc, observers heard the first sonic boom ever produced by an aircraft in controlled, level flight.
The Man Behind the Moment
Yeager was 24 years old. He had no college degree. He was a maintenance officer’s son from Hamlin, West Virginia, who had enlisted in the Army Air Corps as a private and worked his way up through sheer ability. During World War II, he shot down 13 German aircraft — including five in a single mission — and was himself shot down over France, escaping through occupied territory with the help of the French Resistance. After the war, his exceptional eyesight, reflexes, and calm under pressure made him a natural for the test pilot programme at Muroc. He was not chosen for the X-1 because he was the most educated or the most senior pilot available. He was chosen because he was the best stick-and-rudder man the Air Force had. The broken-ribs story remained secret for years. When it finally emerged, it only reinforced what everyone in the test pilot community already knew: Yeager was not the kind of man who let anything — pain, fear, bureaucracy, or the laws of physics — stand between him and the mission. He died on December 7, 2020, at the age of 97, having lived long enough to see the sound barrier become a routine crossing for military pilots around the world. The broomstick handle is now in the Smithsonian.Sources: Chuck Yeager Foundation, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Medium




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