Born: 08/18/1918
Inducted: 10/14/2006
Born in Monticello and raised in
Madison, Wisconsin, Robert Skuldt began his career in aviation in
1940. After obtaining his his private pilot certificate, he borrowed
enough money to buy an Aeronca K that he flew to Florida and back -
in two weeks.
After earning his instructor's
certificate in 1942, Skuldt gave lessons to Army glider pilots in
Janesville and to Navy pilots in Madison. Commissioned an the Air
Transport Command of the Army Air Corps, Skuldt ferried military
aircraft to Europe before transferring to India where he flew
transport aircraft over the Himalayas to China.
After the war Bob returned to Madison
and became the first postwar civilian manager of the Madison city
airport. He was one of the founding officers of the Wisconsin Air
National Guard. Skuldt retired from the guard in 1970 as a full
colonel.
Skuldt served as Madison airport
manager for thirty-four years. During that period he oversaw
tremendous expansion of the small-city airport into an bustling
regional aviation facility under county jurisdiction.
Reaching beyond Dane County, Skuldt
was a founding member of the Wisconsin Airport Management
Association and of the Great Lakes Chapter of the American
Association of Airport Executives. He also found time to log 7,300
flying hours in over fifty types of civilian and military aircraft.
A professional in every sense of the
word, Robert Skuldt left a uniformly positive mark on every facet of
aviation in Wisconsin in the last half of the 20th century.
|

Bob studies the Civil Aviation
Regulations for his pilot written exam, 1938
(Photo courtesy Robert Skuldt)

Bob was assigned to the 20th AAF
Glider Training Detachment. He is in the back row, second from left
in this Aug 1942 picture
(Photo courtesy Robert Skuldt)

Bob flew this B-26 to Casablanca Feb
1944
(Photo courtesy Robert Skuldt)

Robert Skuldt served as airport
manager for the Madison / Dane County airport for 34 years.
(Photo courtesy Robert Skuldt)

On June 16, 2004 Dane County
recognized Bob, naming the new airport conference room in his honor.
(WAHF photo by Tom Thomas)
|