Born: //1878
Died: //1945
Inducted: 10/22/2005
Anton Brotz was a natural born
mechanic, technician, and engineer who spent his entire working life
in the engineering department of the Kohler Corporation. Born in
Sheboygan, Brotz seemed to always be building something, he built
his own automobile in 1902. Famed aviator Lincoln Beachey was the
first pilot to fly over Sheboygan in 1912 and Brotz was there. A
decade later, at age 44, Anton Brotz completed pilot training in
Chicago, brought home his first airplane - a war surplus Standard -
and established Sheboygan's first airport.
In 1927, he accepted the invitation
of Walter Kohler to develop an airport in the Village of Kohler and
advised on the purchase of a Ryan 'Brougham' model aircraft that
helped elect Mr. Kohler as "The Flying Governor" of
Wisconsin" in 1928. Interested in high-altitude flight, Brotz
refitted his open-cockpit Woodson biplane with a Wright J-5
'Whirlwind' engine and flew it to 17,000 feet. When his son-in-law,
Felix Waitkus, made a successful attempt to fly his Lockheed Vega
solo across the Atlantic, Brotz had been there helping to prepare
the aircraft for its long over-water journey.
Anton Brotz retired from aviation
when the Kohler Airport closed in 1936. He is remembered as the
founding father of aviation in the Sheboygan area and of a family of
aviators whose accomplishments he inspired.
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