Pat Epps
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Photo by Roxanne Taylor,
Atlanta Aviation Graphics |
Pat Epps directed the spectacular recovery of a
WW II fighter buried beneath 256 feet of the Greenland ice cap. He is a native
of Athens, Georgia, and the youngest son of Ben T. Epps, Georgia aviation
pioneer.
At age three his father was killed in an
airplane crash, but his mother still encouraged her children to fly. At age
fifteen, Epps won the Southeastern Free Flight Model Sailplane contest. In high
school, Epps worked in an auto maintenance shop and, at the same time, carried
on the family’s love of aviation. His five brothers and one of his three
sisters received their pilot’s licenses. He took flying lessons from his
brother, Doug, and soloed a Piper J-3 Cub. Epps entered college at the
Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia.
During summers he worked in a machine shop in
Yakima, Washington, and graduated from "Georgia Tech" in 1956 with a
degree in Mechanical Engineering. He headed west to work as a flight test
engineer for Boeing in Seattle on the prototype of the 707, America’s first
jet airliner.
Epps entered the United States Air Force in 1957
and began flight training. As a distinguished graduate of Class 58L, he became
the fifth of Ben Epps’ sons to become a military pilot. Assigned to
transports, he first flew the Boeing C-97 Stratofreighter and later the
Fairchild C-123 Provider. He left the service in 1963 and two years
later bought a small air service at Dekalb-Peachtree Airport near Atlanta. He
started Epps Air Service with just 19 employees, and today his 140 workers
provide flight training, aircraft maintenance, aircraft sales, fuel servicing,
and air charter.
He does contract flying in the northeast for the
U.S. Federal Reserve System utilizing 10 Mitsubishi MU-2s and a Cessna Citation.
Epps has 7,000 hours as a commercial pilot with type ratings in the North
American B-25 Mitchell, Douglas DC-3 Gooney Bird, Learjet, and
Cessna Citation. For fun, he flies his aerobatic Beechcraft Bonanza in
local air shows and tells tales of his adventures during the 11-year quest to
recover the "Lost Squadron" from under the Greenland ice cap.
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