Peter Hoag
Peter Charles Hoag was an American test pilot and aerospace engineer who trained under Chuck Yeager. He holds the record for top speed in a lifting body, reaching Mach 1.861 in a Northrop HL-10 on February 18, 1970.
Early life
Hoag was born in Chicago to Russell and Helene Hoag in 1937. He studied geology at Caltech for a few years before entering the U.S. Air Force as a pilot.He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering at Washington State University and a Master of Science degree in aeronautics and astronautics from Stanford University.
Career
Hoag served as a pilot in the Air Force for 28 years. As a Major, he also taught test pilots.In 1964, he applied for the U.S. Air Force Aerospace Research Pilot School and received orders to attend class 64-C, which commenced in August 1964 at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The commandant at the time was Chuck Yeager, and Hoag's twelve-member class included Spence M. Armstrong, Alfred Worden, Stuart Roosa, Henry Hartsfield, and Charles Duke. Hoag finished top of the class in September 1965.
He joined the HL-10 program in 1969 as one of 4 pilots, including John A. Manke, William H. Dana, and Jerauld R. Gentry. The HL-10 was one of five heavyweight lifting-body designs flown at NASA's Flight Research Center to develop safe maneuvering and landing of a low lift-over-drag vehicle designed for reentry from space. He completed his first glide flight on June 6, 1969, and made a total of 8 flights in the HL-10.
Hoag holds the record for fastest lifting body flight, which reached Mach 1.861 on February 18, 1970.
He also flew the XB-70 Valkyrie. On June 8, 1966, Hoag was piloting a Northrop T-38 Talon chase plane when the second prototype of the XB-70 collided mid-air with a NASA/Lockheed F-104 Starfighter over Barstow, California. The F-104 pilot Joseph A. Walker and XB-70 co-pilot Carl S. Cross were killed, although the XB-70 pilot Alvin S. White survived after ejecting. The crash occurred when the XB-70's powerful wake vortex flipped the F-104, causing it to strike the XB-70 tail and explode, while the XB-70 entered an uncontrolled spin and crashed.
After retiring from the service, he worked at McDonnell Douglas for a decade.
He died in Provo, Utah in 2024, aged 87.
Personal life
While stationed at Lakenheath in England, Hoag met Patricia McCrea Waller. The couple married in 1960 and had 5 children. After Waller's death, Hoag remarried with Alecia Ann Jones in 1994.Hoag was Mormon and volunteered at temples in St. Louis, Missouri and Provo.