Gorgeous ca 1920 USN Pilot Wing by Robbins of USMC Aviator #4 Francis T. Evans
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Gorgeous ca 1920 USN Pilot Wing by Robbins of USMC Aviator #4 Francis T. Evans

Code: usnw102115fte


SOLD!!! No Longer Available!

Product Description

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ARTIFACT:

What we have here is a gorgeous circa 1920 USN Pilot Wing by Robbins in 1/20th 10K Gold Fill on Silver. This exquisitely made USN Aviator Wing has the early Robbins "Touchmark" maker mark which was only used during and for a few years after, WWI. The wing has a drop-in locking catch, if it had a Tiffany style locking catch we would date it to WWI. 

The wing was acquired by us for our own collection in 2017 from a long time military collector who had acquitted the wing from the estate of USMC Colonel Francis T. Evans. 

Colonel Francis Thomas Evans Sr., USMC (Retired) (3 June 1886 - 14 March 1974) was a pioneer aviator. He was one of the earliest United States Marine Corps aviators, USMC Aviator #4, and USN Aviator #26, one of the first persons to perform a loop in a seaplane, and a pioneer of stall and spin recovery techniques.

Evans was born in Delaware, Ohio, on 3 June 1886. He served as an enlisted member of the Ohio National Guard from 9 August 1904 to 8 August 1907 and attended Ohio Wesleyan University until 1908, becoming a member of Beta Theta Pi. Evans accepted a commission as a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps on 24 January 1909. He became one of the earliest United States Marine Corps aviators, being designated Naval Aviator Number 26 and Marine Aviator Number 4.

By early 1917, Evans was the most experienced Curtiss N-9 floatplane pilot in the world. Although the consensus among aviators and even the N-9's manufacturer was that the N-9 could not be looped, Evans believed it was possible. On February 13, 1917, he flew an N-9 over the Gulf of Mexico off Pensacola, Florida, and began attempts to loop it. He succeeded on his fourth try, becoming one of the first persons ever to loop a seaplane (the first pilot to loop a seaplane was Polish aviator Jan Nagorski on 17 September 1916 in Grigorovich M-9 flying boat). Lacking witnesses, he flew over Naval Air Station Pensacola and repeated the feat. In 1936, he received the Distinguished Flying Cross for this achievement.

More important, however, were the stall and spin recovery techniques he discovered that day. During his first three loop attempts, the N-9 stalled before he reached the apex of the loop and fell into a spin. He found that by releasing back-pressure on the stick and aggressively applying opposite rudder to the direction of the spin he could change the spin into a normal dive and recover, something previously thought impossible in an N-9. His stall and spin recovery techniques remain in use to this day by aviators around the world.

During World War I, Evans was stationed in the Azores in 1918 in command of a seaplane squadron.

Evans took actions after the 29 June 1925 earthquake in Santa Barbara, California, to help save the city from fire, for which he received a letter of commendation from the United States Secretary of the Navy and a resolution from the City of Santa Barbara.

The Marine Corps lacked any kind of ambulance aircraft in the 1920s and early 1930s, so Evans came up with a way of housing a stretcher and a medical attendant aboard a modified Douglas P2D-1 patrol floatplane, and the Marine Corps used the modified aircraft in support of its occupation duties in Haiti and Santo Domingo.

Evans was grounded after two serious crashes in 1935 and was retired for physical disability in July 1938. However, he was recalled to duty in October 1939 and continued to serve in the Marine Corps until December 1944.

Evans was married to Elizabeth Kibbey, daughter of John D. Kibbey and his wife Clara Egerton, of Marshalltown, Iowa. Their oldest son, Captain Francis T. Evans Jr., USAF, served in Europe during World War II as a United States Army Air Forces fighter pilot and later served in the United States Air Force. He died on 16 June 1953 while attempting to land his disabled F-86 Sabre fighter at Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, when he put the F-86 into a nosedive to avoid crashing into a playground full of children at Forestville Elementary School in Forestville, Maryland. Francis T. Evans Elementary School in Clinton, Maryland, is named in honor of him.

A younger son, Captain Douglas K. Evans, served in the U.S. Army Air Forces and then in the U.S. Air Force in the Korean War and Vietnam War as a jet fighter pilot. Douglas Evans took Francis T. Evans Sr., on his first jet airplane flight on 4 January 1947, in a T-33 Shooting Star.

Francis T. Evans Sr., died on 14 March 1974 after six years of declining health. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.

*Any pictures in the listing DO NOT come with the wing and are provided only to "put a face to the name". 

VINTAGE: Circa 1920.

SIZE: Approximately: 13/16" in height x 2-3/4" in length.

MATERIALS / CONSTRUCTION: 1/20 10K Gold Fill on Sterling.

ATTACHMENT: Horizontal pin with drop-in locking catch.

MARKINGS:

Robbins "Touchmark" maker mark. 1/20 10K GF 

ITEM NOTES: This is from a USN WING collection which we will be listing more of over the next few months. KBJJM17 LADIEX09/08/24 SADCJX11/24

CONDITION: 9- (Excellent+): The wing is in excellent condition, with duty worn gorgeous patina.

GUARANTEE: As with all my artifacts, this piece is guaranteed to be original, as described.