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Richard Duncan Hiscocks MBE (4 June 1914 – 13 December 1996) was a Canadian aerodynamicist and aviation engineer, responsible for many well-known aircraft of Canadian origin.
Early life
editHe was born in Toronto, Ontario. He went to school in Toronto and studied Engineering Physics at the University of Toronto, where he graduated in 1938. Over the summer at university he had worked at de Havilland Canada (DHC).
Career
editNational Research Council
editFrom 1940 he worked at the National Research Council (NRC), being sent to Germany to interview German aerospace scientists. He worked at the NRC later from 1968-76.
de Havilland Canada
editHe helped to design the DHC-3 Otter. Later designs he would work on at DHC, from 1976-79, were the Dash 7 and Dash 8.
Publications
edit- Design of Light Aircraft, 1 December 1995, ISBN 0969980906
Personal life
editFor his work at NRC, he was awarded the MBE in 1947.[citation needed]
He died aged 82. He is buried in St Mary's Anglican Church. He married the naturalist Bettie Jacobs (1915-2007).[citation needed]
See also
edit- Leslie Frise of the Bristol Aeroplane Company
- Prof Richard Hiscocks (1907-98), English political scientist, Professor of International Relations from 1964 at the University of Sussex[1]
References
edit- ^ Obituary Times Wednesday 5 August 1998, page 19