. . . . . . . . . . . "Alan Butler (22 November 1898 \u201424 May 1987), born as Alan Samuel Butler, was (claimed his obituary in The Times) the first private aeroplane owner-driver. From 1923 Butler was chairman of De Havilland Aircraft Company \u2014which he financed\u2014 until 1950, a year when De Havilland employed 20,000 people and was building Comet, the world's first commercial jet airliner. He was born in Gloucestershire near Bristol in 1898 to Marion n\u00E9e Cochran and Samuel Butler, a prosperous merchant in Bristol and inventor holding a number of patents. His father died in July 1906 leaving 7-year old Alan wealthy. His Scottish-born mother remarried in 1913 when Alan was at Eton. Always an enthusiast for flying he finished school during the First World War. However he was sent straight from school to the military college at Sandhurst and on graduation to the Coldstream Guards arriving in France just after the Armistice. He was stationed on Wimbledon Common in 1919 and so he was able to learn to fly at the school run by Colonel G L P Henderson at Hounslow. There he trained in Mono Avros. When free of his wartime commitments Butler bought his own aircraft and moved to Newfoundland where he made his own air-survey business later Aerofilms Limited owned by Aircraft Operating Company. In 1921 he asked Geoffrey de Havilland to build him an aircraft to Butler's own specification. This new aircraft was the first DH37A and Butler named it Sylvia after his sister. Pleased with the aeroplane and impressed by the De Havilland company staff he lent his financial support to the new venture and took the chair of the De Havilland Aircraft Company and held it from 1923 until 1950. In 1925 Butler married Lois Knox-Niven (n\u00E9e Reid) and they had two children, a daughter Carol and a son David. He toured Europe in his new aircraft in 1923 \u2014the first English private owner to do so\u2014 before leaving for Labrador seeking a new Klondike. Butler owned a series of De Havilland aircraft which he raced as well as establishing some world records. In 1930 both he and his Canadian-born wife, Lois, competed piloting different aircraft \u2014Butler's was a DH-60G\u2014 in the Europa Rundflug, a 7,000 mile race around Europe. Butler won but was disqualified on a technical point. Lois Butler was one of the earliest women pilots appointed to the Air Transport Auxiliary during the Second World War. When he left De Havilland in 1950 there were 20,000 employees. His colleagues described him as \"conscientious to a degree and outspoken almost to a fault\". Butler also had a 250-ton ketch also called Sylvia and made regular trans-Atlantic voyages in her. Sylvia was fitted with a complete refrigeration plant. He was active in South Bedfordshire's local affairs \u2014he served many years as a JP\u2014 and continued to fly until he was 75. His wife, Lois, died in 1970 and his son David, a third generation yachtsman, in a road accident in 1972. In 1973, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Aero Club. Alan Butler died aged 88. He was survived by his daughter Carol Horton."@en . . . . . . . . "1068780477"^^ . . . . "55180550"^^ . . . "Alan Butler (22 November 1898 \u201424 May 1987), born as Alan Samuel Butler, was (claimed his obituary in The Times) the first private aeroplane owner-driver. From 1923 Butler was chairman of De Havilland Aircraft Company \u2014which he financed\u2014 until 1950, a year when De Havilland employed 20,000 people and was building Comet, the world's first commercial jet airliner. In 1925 Butler married Lois Knox-Niven (n\u00E9e Reid) and they had two children, a daughter Carol and a son David. Alan Butler died aged 88. He was survived by his daughter Carol Horton."@en . . . . "Alan Samuel Butler"@en . "5282"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .