1993 – John W. “Jack” Colley

John W. “Jack” Colley — National Agricultural Aviation Hall of Fame

Father of the Colley Super Stearman

Personal Background

  • Birth: May 23, 1923, Edmonds, Washington
  • Education & Youth: Attended Edmonds schools; played clarinet, basketball, football, baseball; had a paper route and raised homing pigeons; early passion for airplanes and motorcycles
  • Military Service:
    • Joined National Guard senior year of high school, completed one-year service
    • Graduated high school via night school
    • Joined the Army Air Forces as an aviation cadet in 1942: preflight in Alabama; primary in Georgia; basic in New York; earned wings at Turner Field, Georgia
    • Became a flight instructor for French students in B-25s, attaining Captain by 1945

Postwar Activities

  • Ran a motorcycle delivery business in Seattle
  • Member of Cossack’s Motorcycle Stunt and Drill Team; 1947 Pacific Northwest Championship winner
  • Successful motorcycle racer

Aerial Application & Aviation Career

  • Active Years in Ag Aviation: 1950–1987
  • Flight Experience:
    • Treated wheat in Washington and Montana
    • Treated cotton in New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Central America
    • Multi-state and international schedule: wheat (Pacific NW), cotton (Louisiana/Nicaragua), often flying 10 months a year
  • Fire Control Work:
    • Forestry fire control for the U.S. Forest Service out of Grangeville, Idaho (1960–1965)
  • Stunt Flying:
    • Provided aircraft and stunt piloting for the movie “Whiff’s” (1974) near Salt Lake City, Utah

Accidents Survived

  • Three serious Stearman accidents—with total loss of aircraft but no serious injuries:
    • 1952: Engine failure in southern Idaho
    • 1956: Engine failure—crashed through a house in Nicaragua
    • 1976: Downdraft in Nezperce, Idaho—aircraft burned

Colley Super Stearman – Engineering and Innovation

  • Owner/Operator: Colley Aviation, Nezperce, Idaho (from 1960)
  • Designed and built the renowned “Colley Super Stearman”
    • Built 26 highly modified Stearman aircraft
  • Key Modifications:
    • Complete fuselage overhaul: sandblasted, treated (linseed oil inside/epoxy paint outside)
    • 300-gallon fiberglass hopper with Transland gate, Simplex spray system, 2-inch bottom loader
    • Molded fiberglass canopy and fuselage cover with large access doors and good visibility; cockpit-controlled hopper door
    • Modified tail trunnion to elevate tail for ground visibility
    • New hardware: bearings, pulleys, cables
    • Power: 600 hp Pratt & Whitney R-1340 engine, Hamilton Standard 12D40 propeller
    • 27-inch wheels, automotive brakes, 12-volt electrical system
    • Wings: Extended/squared, performance fiberglass wingtips, ailerons on upper wings (four total, all servo-boosted)
    • Fuel: 80 gallons (including two 18-gallon upper wing reserve tanks)
    • Structure: Inspected/refinished wood, epoxy-finished tail, Dacron fabric, signature blue/yellow/orange color scheme
    • Specs: Empty weight 3,300 lbs; gross 5,200 lbs; 36’ span, 26’ length, 11.5’ height

Industry Involvement & Leadership

  • Association Involvement:
    • Member of multiple state agricultural aviation associations, including Idaho, Pacific Northwest, and national (NAAA)
    • Retained memberships even after retirement
  • Leadership Roles:
    • President, Idaho Agricultural Aviation Association (IDAAA)
    • Vice-President, Idaho Aviation Trades Association
    • Board member, IDAAA, PNWAAA, and NAAA

Reputation and Legacy

  • Known as: “Father of the Colley Super Stearman”
  • Achievements:
    • Unparalleled innovation in modernizing and rebuilding Stearman aircraft for ag work
    • Colley Super Stearman became a benchmark of quality, performance, and safety, earning respect across North and Central America
    • A career marked by safety (survivor of multiple accidents), technical ingenuity, and dedication to advancing both equipment and industry standards
  • Inducted into the National Agricultural Aviation Hall of Fame: 1993
Author: NAAHOF