Ormer Leslie Locklear (October 28, 1891 – August 2, 1920) was an American aviator, barnstormer, and silent film actor celebrated for his groundbreaking aerial stunts, including wing walking and mid-air plane transfers, which captivated audiences in the early 20th century.[1][2] Born in Greenville, Texas, and raised in Fort Worth, Locklear trained as a carpenter before enlisting in the U.S. Army Air Service during World War I, where he pioneered techniques that enhanced military aviation practices.[3] After the war, he became known as the "King of the Wing Walkers," performing high-risk feats at county fairs and air shows across the United States, earning up to $3,000 per day and inspiring future generations of stunt pilots.[3][2] His transition to Hollywood marked a pivotal chapter, as he starred in and performed his own stunts for aviation-themed films, blending his expertise with the burgeoning silent cinema industry until a fatal crash during production ended his career at age 28.[1][2]Locklear's early fascination with flight stemmed from witnessing an air show in Fort Worth in 1911, where aviation pioneer Calbraith Perry Rodgers landed during his transcontinental journey.[3] By 1917, at the outset of World War I, he joined the Army Air Service and trained as a pilot at Barron Field in Fort Worth, Texas, rising to the rank of squadron commander.[1] During his service, Locklear innovated wing walking on the Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny" biplane to read ground signals from the air, demonstrating the structural integrity of aircraft wings and facilitating advancements like the mounting of machine guns.[3] Discharged in May 1919, he had married Ruby Graves in 1915 and quickly entered the barnstorming circuit, debuting his signature mid-air transfer stunt—jumping from one plane to another—publicly on May 16, 1919, at Uniontown Speedway in Pennsylvania.[1] His repertoire expanded to include handstands on wings, hanging from trapezes, and transfers from moving automobiles to aircraft, all performed without safety harnesses on fragile biplanes.[2][3]In 1919, Locklear ventured into film with The Great Air Robbery, a Universal Studios production where he starred as a pilot, executing authentic stunts that thrilled viewers and helped popularize aviation in cinema.[1] He followed this with The Skywayman in 1920, again starring and performing perilous sequences, including a nighttime dive-bombing scene illuminated by spotlights.[2] Tragically, on August 2, 1920, at DeMille Airfield in Los Angeles, Locklear's plane stalled due to the disorienting glare of landing lights during a stunt for the film, causing a fatal crash that also killed his co-pilot, Milton Elliot.[3] Locklear's body was returned to Fort Worth for burial at Greenwood Cemetery on August 8, 1920, where a Texas Historical Marker was dedicated in his honor in 1991.[1] His legacy endures as a trailblazer whose daring innovations bridged military aviation, exhibition flying, and early Hollywood, influencing depictions of flight in media, such as the 1975 film The Great Waldo Pepper.[2]
Background
Early Life
Ormer Leslie Locklear was born on October 28, 1891, in Greenville, Texas, to James Edward Locklear, a carpenter and building contractor, and Odessa Lula Wood Locklear.[4][3] He was the third of ten children in a family of carpenters and builders.[5][6]In 1906, the Locklear family relocated to Fort Worth, Texas, where Ormer spent his formative years.[7] Soon after the move, around age 15, he began working in his father's construction company, developing carpentry skills that reflected the family's trade-oriented background.[7][3] This early involvement in building projects honed his mechanical aptitude and provided a stable foundation before his interests shifted toward aviation.Locklear's passion for flight ignited in 1911 when he witnessed aviator Calbraith Perry Rodgers land his Vin Fiz Flyer in a Fort Worth pasture during the first transcontinental flight, an event that drew over 8,000 spectators and inspired Locklear's lifelong dedication to aviation.[1][8] Shortly thereafter, around 1911–1912, he and his brothers constructed a homemade glider using bamboo fishing poles for the frame and linen for the wings, which they launched from local hills in early experiments with aerodynamics.[3] These youthful pursuits marked the beginning of Locklear's hands-on engagement with flight principles.
Personal Life
Locklear married Ruby Graves in 1915 while working as a carpenter in Fort Worth, Texas.[1][9] The union produced no children.The marriage ended in separation in 1919, strained by Locklear's intensifying career obligations that pulled him away from home, though the couple did not divorce.[10][11][12] Graves reportedly disapproved of her husband's adventurous pursuits, highlighting the tensions in their differing lifestyles.[11]After the separation, Locklear entered a romantic relationship with silent film actress Viola Dana, becoming engaged to her in early 1920.[13] Their plans to marry remained unrealized following Locklear's death later that year.[13][1]Details on Locklear's daily routines or hobbies are scarce, but his commitments as a spouse and partner were continually challenged by the nomadic demands of his piloting life, which frequently required travel and kept him from stable domestic settings.[1][10]
Aviation Career
Military Service
Ormer Locklear enlisted in the United States Army Air Service on October 25, 1917, in San Antonio, Texas, at the age of 25, driven by the urgent wartime demand for aviators following the United States' entry into World War I and his longstanding personal fascination with flight.[1][3] He was promptly sent to Camp Dick in Dallas, Texas, for initial ground school training, where cadets underwent intensive instruction in aviation theory, mechanics, and military discipline.[1][14]By early 1918, Locklear advanced to primary flight training at Barron Field near Fort Worth, Texas, where he soloed and honed his piloting skills on the Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny" biplane, a standard trainer aircraft of the era.[1][3] Demonstrating exceptional aptitude, he was soon commissioned as a second lieutenant and assigned as a flying instructor at the same field, where he trained novice pilots in basic maneuvers and cross-country navigation. He was later promoted to squadron commander at Barron Field, overseeing cross-country flight training.[7][1] During this period, Locklear developed his renowned expertise in aerobatics, including wing walking to read ground signals from the air during training, as the aircraft's structure blocked his view from the cockpit, and mid-air transfers between aircraft.[3][6]Although the Armistice of November 11, 1918, ended hostilities before Locklear could deploy overseas for combat, his instructional role proved vital to the Air Service's expansion, training pilots for potential frontline duties.[7] He received an honorable discharge on May 7, 1919, with recognition for his significant contributions to the war effort through pilot training.[1][3]
Barnstorming and Stunts
Following his discharge from the U.S. Army Air Service, Ormer Locklear formed Locklear's Flying Circus in June 1919 alongside fellow aviators Milton "Skeets" Elliott and Shirley Short, leveraging their shared experience as instructors at Barron Field in Texas to stage exhibitions nationwide using surplus Curtiss JN-4D biplanes.[15] These profit-driven civilian shows capitalized on the post-World War I aviation boom, contrasting the structured military training that had honed Locklear's aerial acrobatics skills.[16]The troupe's signature stunts emphasized daring maneuvers performed at low altitudes, including wing walking where Locklear would balance on the biplane's upper wing or hang from the undercarriage by his knees, mid-air transfers in which he climbed a rope ladder dangling from a second aircraft to switch planes at speeds exceeding 90 miles per hour, and simulated combat routines featuring mock dogfights and formation dives to thrill spectators.[16] Performances in major cities such as Los Angeles and New York routinely drew crowds of thousands, with Locklear commanding fees up to $3,000 per day for these high-risk displays that blended precision flying with theatrical flair.[3]On April 7, 1920, during a low-altitude flight over Los Angeles, Locklear was cited for reckless aerial driving—the first such aviation violation in U.S. history—and fined $25, an incident that underscored the era's regulatory challenges and the inherent dangers of unregulated barnstorming.[17] Locklear further innovated aerial entertainment by incorporating night flying into his acts, using magnesium flares attached to the aircraft to illuminate stunts and create dramatic effects like simulated fiery dives, thereby extending shows into evenings and captivating audiences long after sunset.
Film Career
Entry into Hollywood
Locklear's reputation as a daring barnstormer drew the attention of Hollywood producers during one of his aerial shows in Los Angeles in 1919, marking his transition from live performances to the film industry.[10] Impressed by his mid-air feats, Universal Pictures, under the leadership of founder Carl Laemmle, approached Locklear through his promoter William Pickens, leading to a contract that capitalized on the public's post-World War I fascination with aviation.[1] This agreement, signed in July 1919, allowed Locklear to integrate his authentic stunts into scripted narratives, aiming to excite audiences and promote the thrill of flight in an era when airplanes symbolized progress and adventure.[18]Locklear made his screen debut in The Great Air Robbery (1919), a Universal serial directed by Jacques Jaccard, where he portrayed an air mail pilot battling a gang of aerial criminals known as the "Death's Head Squadron."[19] Filming began shortly after his contract was inked, with Locklear performing real-life aerial maneuvers that formed the core of the action sequences, blending his expertise with the storyline to create groundbreaking cinematic aviation drama.[1] Laemmle's vision for the production emphasized Locklear's genuine skills over fabricated effects, positioning the film as a showcase for the untapped potential of stunt flying in motion pictures.[10]This initial venture quickly elevated Locklear to the role of pioneering "aviation stunt man," setting a precedent for authentic aerial action that influenced the development of early adventure and action genres in Hollywood.[18] By authentically capturing the dangers and excitement of flight, his work in The Great Air Robbery helped shift film storytelling toward more realistic depictions of heroism in the skies, inspiring subsequent productions to incorporate live aviation elements.[20]
Major Productions and Stunts
Locklear's most prominent film role following his debut came in The Skywayman (1920), a 15-chapter adventure serial produced by Fox Film Corporation and directed by James P. Hogan, in which he portrayed the heroic pilot Captain Norman combating a gang of air pirates.[21] In this production, Locklear not only starred as the lead but also executed all of the aerial sequences himself, leveraging his expertise to integrate authentic aviation feats into the narrative.[22]The stunts in The Skywayman pushed the boundaries of early cinematic aviation, featuring Locklear's signature maneuvers such as wing walking on a Curtiss JN-4 Jenny biplane, a transfer from a moving train to an airplane, and a nighttime spiraling dive over oil fields. These sequences, filmed primarily at DeMille Field in Los Angeles, owned by Cecil B. DeMille—who had a known interest in aviation authenticity—emphasized realism in aerial depictions. Locklear insisted on performing the stunts himself rather than relying on miniatures.[23]Syncing these high-risk aerial actions with the serial's episodic storyline presented significant technical hurdles, including coordinating camera placements on secondary aircraft and timing narrative beats to match unpredictable flight dynamics, which ultimately amplified the film's suspenseful pacing.[22] Locklear's innovative approach in The Skywayman contributed to the surging popularity of aviation-themed serials in the early 1920s, influencing producer William Fox to prioritize such spectacles and paving the way for subsequent directors to incorporate more ambitious flight sequences in Hollywood productions.[24]
Filmography
Locklear appeared in a limited number of films, primarily performing his own aerial stunts while taking on leading roles in aviation-themed serials. His credited appearances are as follows, presented chronologically:
Posthumously released after Locklear's death during filming; he also served as stunt performer.[1][26]
Locklear had no other credited acting roles, though he contributed uncredited stunt work to aviation sequences in various silent films of the era.[1]
Death and Legacy
Fatal Accident
On August 2, 1920, during the production of the film The Skywayman at DeMille Field in Los Angeles, California, Ormer Locklear and his mechanic, Milton "Skeets" Elliott, were killed when their Curtiss JN-4 Jennybiplane crashed while performing a nighttime stunt.[27][1] The stunt involved a spiraling dive from approximately 5,000 feet, illuminated by searchlights and phosphorus flares on the wings to guide the aircraft in the darkness.[22] However, Locklear misjudged the plane's height due to spatial disorientation caused by inadequate lighting and the glare from the unextinguished beams, failing to pull out of the dive and crashing into an oil well sump.[27][22]The aircraft exploded on impact, killing both men instantly.[27] Autopsies conducted afterward confirmed the deaths as accidental, resulting from the crash during the stunt.[1] The incident was accidentally captured on film by the production crew, but the footage was deemed too graphic and was either destroyed or excluded from the final release; the entire film The Skywayman is now considered lost.Locklear's fiancée, actress Viola Dana, witnessed the crash from the set.[1] His body was transported to Fort Worth, Texas, arriving on August 7, 1920, for funeral services on August 8 at Mulkey Memorial Methodist Church, attended by thousands of mourners including Hollywood figures and aviation enthusiasts.[1] The remains were then buried at Greenwood Cemetery.[1]
Cultural Impact and Recognition
Ormer Locklear's pioneering integration of genuine aviation stunts into early Hollywood films marked a significant advancement in cinematic realism, elevating the authenticity of aerial sequences and popularizing the adventure serial genre that captivated audiences in the 1920s.[28] By performing feats such as mid-air plane transfers and the first on-screen car-to-aircraft leap in The Great Air Robbery (1919), he set a precedent for high-risk, unscripted action that influenced subsequent filmmakers and helped transition aviation from mere spectacle to narrative essential in action-adventure storytelling.[28] His work emphasized the raw dangers of flight, inspiring genres that romanticized the post-World War I aviator's daring ethos.[1]Locklear's legacy extended to shaping perceptions of barnstormers in popular culture, serving as a real-life prototype for fictional characters like Waldo Pepper in the 1975 film The Great Waldo Pepper, directed by George Roy Hill, where he is featured in the opening credits and the movie is dedicated to him and other fallen stunt pilots.[29] His influence resonated with later pilots and directors, embodying the thrill-seeking spirit of early aviation that informed depictions of aerial heroism in mid-20th-century cinema.[1] Additionally, Locklear's innovations in night flying techniques, including the use of phosphorus flares for illuminated stunts, contributed to early Hollywood's pursuit of aviation realism, though they underscored the perilous risks involved, as explored in modern biographies.[28][22]Posthumously, Locklear has received formal recognition through archival preservation and historical commemorations that highlight his enduring impact. The Ormer Locklear Collection at the University of Texas at Dallas, donated in 1978 and expanded in 1991, includes photographs, clippings, and materials related to his career, serving as a key resource for scholars studying early aviation and film.[1] Similarly, the digitized collection at The Portal to Texas History preserves images of his stunts, family, and funeral, ensuring access to primary sources on his contributions.[2] In 1992, the Texas Historical Commission erected a marker at his gravesite in Greenwood Memorial Park, Fort Worth, honoring his role as a native Texan from Greenville who symbolized the bold, innovative spirit of post-World War I aviation.[7] Biographies such as Art Ronnie's Locklear: The Man Who Walked on Wings (1973) further cement his status, detailing how his feats popularized barnstorming nationwide and his interactions with Hollywood luminaries amplified aviation's cultural allure.[30] Locklear is also honored in publications by the OX-5 Aviation Pioneers, where he is celebrated as the "King of the Wing Walkers" and a foundational figure in acrobatic flight.[3]