Maxie Anderson | |
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Anderson (1981)
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Born |
Max Leroy Anderson September 10, 1934 Sayre, Oklahoma |
Died | June 27, 1983 Bad Kissingen, West Germany |
(aged 48)
Cause of death | Balloon crash |
Resting place | Sunset Memorial Park, Albuquerque, New Mexico 35°06′29.2″N 106°37′59.9″W / 35.108111°N 106.633306°W |
Nationality | American |
Education | Missouri Military Academy |
Alma mater | University of North Dakota |
Occupation | Balloonist, businessman |
Spouse(s) | Patty Anderson |
Children | 4 |
Parent(s) |
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Awards | Congressional Gold Medal (1979) |
Maxie Anderson (born Max Leroy Anderson; September 10, 1934 – June 27, 1983) was an American hot air balloonist and Congressional Gold Medal recipient
Anderson was born in Sayre, Oklahoma, to rancher and mining industry executive Carl Anderson. He entered the Missouri Military Academy at Mexico, Missouri, at the age of eight, and throughout his high school years assisted his father in building pipelines. He engaged in prospecting in the Arctic Circle before completing his degree in industrial engineering at the University of North Dakota in 1956. He developed an early interest in flight, obtaining a license at the age of fifteen (having misrepresented his age). This allowed him to fly a plane to the academy at age 15, while cars were banned except for those aged 18. In Albuquerque, New Mexico, he entered the mining industry, acquiring his own company, Ranchers Exploration and Development Corporation, before he was thirty. His career was marked by innovations in extraction technologies, delivery systems, and administrative practices. For his work, Anderson was inducted into the National Mining Hall of Fame.
Along with his friend Ben Abruzzo, he became interested in hot air ballooning. The two decided to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of Charles Lindbergh’s flight, and engaged balloonist Ed Yost (whose transatlantic bid had failed in 1958) to build the Double Eagle. The balloon was launched near Marshfield, Massachusetts on September 9, 1977, but the flight was aborted off the coast of Iceland on September 13. In 1978 Larry Newman, a manufacturer of hang gliders, was added to the crew for the next attempt in the Double Eagle II. This venture was launched August 11 at Presque Isle, Maine, and arrived at Miserey, France, on August 17. For their efforts, the team was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 1979. It was both a distance record (3108 miles) and a duration record (137 hours) for the sport. With his son Kristian, he made the first non-stop trans-North American balloon flight. The Kitty Hawk departed Fort Baker, California, on May 8, 1980, and landed on May 12 at Sainte-Félicité, Quebec. He next decided to complete a circumnavigation of the globe. With Don Ida he launched the balloon Jules Verne from Luxor, Egypt on January 11, 1981, travelling 4,316 kilometres (2,682 mi), and landing in Hansa, India 48 hours later.