Alexandru "Alex" Papană (18 October 1906 – 17 April 1946) was a Romanian-American aviator and bobsledder who competed from the early 1930s to the late 1940s.

Quick Facts Medal record, Bobsleigh ...
Alexandru Papană

Medal record
Bobsleigh
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1933 SchreiberhauTwo-man
Bronze medal – third place1934 EngelbergTwo-man
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Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Alexandru Papană
Born
Alexandru Papană

(1906-10-18)18 October 1906
Died17 April 1946(1946-04-17) (aged 39)
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Bobsleigh career

Competing for Romania in bobsleigh, he won two medals in the two-man event at the FIBT World Championships with a gold in 1933 and a bronze in 1934. Papană also competed in two Winter Olympics, earning his best finish of fourth in the two-man event at Lake Placid, New York, in 1932. He retired from bobsledding after the 1936 Winter Olympics.

Aviation career

Papană obtained his pilot's license in 1928 while in Romania, and was already setting altitude records in 1931. At the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, he competed in gliding (which was a demonstration sport), finishing a respectable 12th as the only representative from Romania. This earned him an invitation to an aerobatics competition in Los Angeles.

Papană accepted the offer, and he and his plane, a Bücker Bü 133B Jungermeister (one of only two versions of that variant ever produced) with the registration YR-PAX, were flown from Frankfurt, Germany, to New York, New York, aboard the Hindenburg airship in August 1936. He then flew across the United States from New York to Los Angeles, winning the race between the cities. In Los Angeles, he won the national air races that were held there. In December of that year, Papană finished second with the Jungermeister in a race from Miami, Florida, to Havana, Cuba.

At an airshow in Cleveland, Ohio, the following year, Papană was in a battle with fellow aviator Count Hagenburg that ended up crashing the count's aircraft. Papană offered Hagenburg his aircraft, but the count refused.

Papană's aircraft was damaged on the runway at an airport in Chicago, Illinois, in 1940. The plane was sold twice before being donated to the Smithsonian Institution in 1973. The aircraft is now located at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia.

Papană later tested gliders for Northrop as a test pilot, many of his flights being documented in Flying magazine. He was involved in the trials for the P-61 Black Widow aircraft that would be involved during World War II for the United States Army Air Forces.

Other activities

Papană was also active in his youth as a goalkeeper, competing for Colţea București.

Personal life

Papană was born in Bucharest. He was married twice. His first wife Dina, who he married in 1938, died while in childbirth on 5 September of that same year. He remarried to Jean Hacker on 30 April 1945, but their marriage in Beverly Hills, California, did not go well.

He died on 17 April 1946 after abandoning his car 17 miles (27 km) south of Las Vegas, Nevada. Authorities discovered Papană's body six days later with a suicide note. Papană died by poisoning.

References

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