Eric Ellington

Eric Ellington (May 15, 1889 – November 24, 1913)[1] was a United States Naval and later Army officer. He was one of the first U. S. servicemen to be killed in an airplane crash. A United States Naval Academy graduate, his nickname at the Academy was "Polly".

Eric Ellington
Born
Eric Lamar Ellington

May 15, 1889
DiedNovember 24, 1913
San Diego, California
Resting placeClayton City Cemetery; Clayton, North Carolina Johnston County
Other names"Polly"
OccupationNavy (Ensign)
Army officer Lieutenant; [aviator]
Years active1905-13

Early life

Ellington was born in North Carolina in 1889 to Sheriff Jesse T. Ellington and his second wife Sallie Williamson. He had 6 half siblings from his father's first marriage. His mother died in 1901 when Eric was 12 and he went to live with an older half-brother John Ellington and finished grade school. He graduated from high school in 1905 at 16.

U.S. Navy

Ellington started at the Naval Academy at sixteen. He graduated in 1909 third in his class and received a Bachelor's Degree. He spent the next two years in mandated Naval being commissioned an Ensign in June 1911. He resigned his commission in November 1911 to accept a commission the U. S. Army.

U. S. Army

After being commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the Army, Ellington was stationed at Fort Sam Houston. This lasted until December 1912 when he moved to College Park Maryland. At College Park Ellignton was placed in the Aeronautical Division, U. S. Signal Corps. Ellington transferred to San Diego where he qualified as an Army pilot in august 1913 and later an instructor.

Death

Ellington and 2nd Lt. Hugh M. Kelly were killed at San Diego November 24, 1913 during a training flight for Kelly.[2] Ellington was buried in Clayton North Carolina in the family plot.

Legacy

Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base is named in honor of Lt. Eric Ellington.

gollark: Imagine consuming alcohol.
gollark: Meh. The uses are different and so are the relative timings.
gollark: Since the introduction of icecast the difference isn't big, I think.
gollark: Discord voice chat also prioritizes real-timeness over not skipping things, so it will remain more in sync with the actual OIR™ stream but sometimes sound juddery.
gollark: You can just use the web frontend.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.