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John McMasters was an enthusiastic engineer with a passion for designing aircraft and inspiring the next generation of engineering designers. He was a tireless advocate for industry integration into project-based learning and in developing sustainable industry-academe partnerships. He was named a Technical Fellow at Boeing, a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and an Outstanding Aerospace Engineer by Purdue.
After graduating with a BS and MS in engineering from the University of Colorado at Boulder, John went on active duty with the U.S. Air Force where he was awarded the Air Force Commendation Medal in 1965 for his conceptual design, deployment and testing of air-to-air guided missiles. He earned a Ph.D. in aeronautical engineering from Purdue University in 1975 and joined Boeing as an aerodynamics engineering soon after graduating, where he was instrumental in developing many innovative design concepts.
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Inspired by the wonders of flight in nature, John was a strong advocate of biomimetic approaches to design. He was involved in the early development of human-powered aircraft design projects and worked with Paul MacCready in developing a flying pterodactyl he called the “Altostratus“. He was also instrumental in the design of a solar-powered sailplane that is on permanent display at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum (see both left photos above). John may be best known to the younger generation, however, as the engineer that proved that bumble bees could fly, in spite of rumors to the contrary by scientists who claimed they could not.
At a talk given to NASA on biomechanics of flight he said: Aeronautics in its traditional form is usually presumed to have started as a engineering discipline somewhere in historical time between the mythological experiments of Daedalus and his ill-fated son, Icarus; and the dreams and schemes of Leonardo da Vinci during the Italian Renaissance, which eventually led to the Wright brothers’ success a century ago. . . . “aeronautics” has a far richer and longer (though less disciplined) history extending over a period of about 300 million year beginning with the evolution of the ability of insects to fly. With the advent of the success of the early 20th Century pioneers, technologists quickly turned their attention from the inspirations and lessons provided by natural models of flying machines to a more practical quest for increasingly dramatic improvements in speed, range and altitude performance, far beyond the limits of what muscles and flapping wings could provide. Thus a field of further productive inquiry was left to a few amateur aeronauts, eccentrics and biologists.
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Throughout his career John was a strong advocate for engineering education reform and held a number of faculty and teaching appointments, including serving as an adjunct faculty member at the University of Washington. He worked with the engineering education community to develop Boeing’s list of “Desired Attributes of an Engineer”. He helped design and launch the Boeing A.D. Welliver Faculty Summer Fellowship internship program and served as program manager for the Ed Wells Initiative, a joint program between Boeing and the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace charged with enhancing the excellence of the SPEEA represented Boeing technical workforce. He was insistent that “we as an aeronautics community (industry, government and academe) have much to do to create a positive vision of our future as vivid as that which has driven our past, and assure the proper education and professional development of a future generation of technical talent in our always dynamic and evolving enterprise.”
In the month prior to his passing, John prepared a set of annotated slides and documents to preserve his legacy of innovations in biomimetics design and engineering education. These documents are being made accessible on the Engineering Pathway digital library and will be presented at a dinner tribute to John at the Mudd Design Workshop VII on May 29, 2009. Paul Dees from Boeing also provided this list of publications by John McMasters.
We welcome you to browse the John McMasters Collection in the Engineering Pathway educational digital library. Or look for resources in his areas of passion:
For more information, see the Engineering Pathway’s educational resources on aircraft design, aerodynamics, fluid dynamics and aeronautic engineering. For related curricula, visit the Aeronautical Engineering Education or the Mechanical Engineeirng Education communities.





7 responses so far ↓
1 Alice Agogino // May 25, 2009 at 8:27 pm
Interested readers might want to see Mera Horne’s blog on the
First Boeing 737 Flight in which she provides a tribute to John McMasters as well.
2 Sheri Sheppard // May 26, 2009 at 8:31 pm
John was an inspiration to all of us—his passion for engineering, design and exploring how things work, and his dedication to mentoring others. I particularly appreciate the support and encouragement John gave me in the early days of my career to create innovative ways of reaching students.
3 Richard Goff // May 29, 2009 at 3:38 pm
John was a super dude. Creative, engaging, intelligent, focused, and committed. He always had a “where the rubber hits the road” approach and great arguments to support his view of engineering design. John without fail gave you food for thought. I miss him. Fly on John.
4 John W. Prados // May 29, 2009 at 5:17 pm
John was probably the most innnovative person I ever met. He has exerted a lasting impact on engineering education through his work in developing the Boeing “List of Desired Attributes of an Engineeer,” which became the basis for the engineering program outcomes required by the ABET criteria for accreditation. He was a gifted professional and a wonderful human being. I feel truly blessed to have known him!
5 Clive L. Dym // Jun 10, 2009 at 12:08 pm
I can only reiterate and reinforce what Alice, Sheri, Richard and John P. have said. John McMasters was a “super dude” who I found to be a wise interpreter of people and events, a funny and often sarcastic critic of all sorts of things (his range and intellectual grasp were very broad), and a very decent, very humane mensch, to borrow the highest compliment from my own tradition. John became a very good friend to me, a strong supporter of much that I valued, and he will be someone I will always miss. Ta, John.
6 Richard Chia // Apr 13, 2010 at 2:34 pm
Hey my Name is as above and I am in North Carolina, interested in Eletrical?Electronics Technology. I have a dipploma in Electronics.
My concern is, I have a brother who is so much interested in the design of plans right now he is working on designning one and he hopes to fly it one day.
So my greasted reason here is one or organisation that can help me do more.
He is in African and he is such a creative young man. I will be very greatful if someone can help out. He has gone a long way.
Some one can reach me at 3368993622.
Thanks and may God bless.
7 Aircraft Hanger Doors // May 14, 2010 at 8:04 am
I’ve been searching about Aircrafts and reading your blog, I found your post very helpful :) . I thought I would leave my first comment. I don’t know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog!
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