| No. | date | Name | A country | Notes |
|---|
| one | 1925 | De Pinedo, Francesco | Italy | Flight from Italy to South America |
| 2 | 1926 | Alan cobham | Great Britain | |
| 3 | 1927 | Lindbergh, Charles | USA | Atlantic non-stop flight |
| four | 1928 | Bert hinkler | Australia | |
| five | 1929 | Dieudonné costes | France | Flight Paris - New York - Paris |
| 6 | 1930 | Balbo, Italo | Italy | Under his leadership, in late 1930, twelve seaplanes flew from Italy to Brazil |
| 7 | 1931 | Eckener, Hugo | Germany | He made a non-stop flight to Tokyo along the route Friedrichshafen - Ulm - Nuremberg - Leipzig - Berlin - Stettin - Gdansk (Danzig) - Kaliningrad (Königsberg) - Sovetsk (Tilsit) - Vologda - Perm - mouth of the Irtysh (Khanty-Mansiysk Nizhnyung) - (Turukhansk district) - Yakutsk - Ayan - Nikolaevsk-on-Amur - Tokyo. Then there was a non-stop flight over the Pacific Ocean: Tokyo - San Francisco - Los Angeles. Thus, Eckener made the first ever round-the-world trip on an airship. |
| eight | 1932 | Sierva, Juan de la | Spain | Gyro creator |
| 9 | 1933 | Post, Wiley | USA | Alone made a round-the-world flight New York - Berlin - Moscow - Alaska - New York in 7 days 18 hours 49 minutes |
| ten | 1934 | CWA Scott | Great Britain | |
| 1935 | not awarded | | |
| eleven | 1936 | Mermoz, Jean | France | May 12, 1930 makes a non-stop flight across the South Atlantic from east to west, May 15 of the same year carries out a flight in the opposite direction. |
| 12 | 1937 | Batten gin | Great Britain | Made a flight from the UK to New Zealand. After 6 days, she reached Australia. October 16, she left the shores of Australia and after 10 and a half hours of flight over the Tasman Sea reached New Zealand. The time of her solo flight was 11 days and 45 minutes. This record lasted for the next 44 years. After several months of rest at home, she made a return flight to the UK in 5 days and 18 hours, thus setting two world records when flying in both directions. |
| 1938 | not awarded | | |
| 1939 | not awarded | | |
| 1940 | not awarded | | |
| 1941 | not awarded | | |
| 1942 | not awarded | | |
| 1943 | not awarded | | |
| 1944 | not awarded | | |
| 1945 | not awarded | | |
| 13 | 1946 | Sikorsky, Igor Ivanovich | USA | Creator of the world's first: four-engine Russian Knight aircraft (1913), heavy four-engine bomber and passenger aircraft Ilya Muromets (1914), transatlantic seaplane, serial single-rotor helicopter (USA, 1942). |
| 14 | 1947 | Yeager, Charles Elwood | USA | On October 14, 1947, Yeager on the Bell X-1 was the first person to exceed the speed of sound in controlled horizontal flight. |
| 1948 | not awarded | | |
| 1949 | not awarded | | |
| 15 | 1950 | Whittle, Frank | Great Britain | Creator of a turbojet aircraft engine |
| sixteen | 1951 | Edward pearson warner | USA | |
| 1952 | not awarded | | |
| 17 | 1953 | Cochrane, Jacqueline | USA | In 1953, the first of the female pilots overcomes the sound barrier. In 1964 - the first among women twice the speed of sound |
| 18 | 1954 | Dolittle, James | USA | He participated in many air shows. He planned and led the attack of tactical bombers in Japanese cities, which is known as the " Doolittle Raid " |
| nineteen | 1955 | Maurice Hurel | France | |
| 20 | 1956 | Peter Twiss | Great Britain | |
| 21 | 1957 | David G. Simons | USA | |
| 22 | 1958 | Tupolev, Andrey Nikolaevich | the USSR | Under the leadership of Tupolev, over 100 types of aircraft were designed, 70 of which were built in series. His planes set 78 world records, completed about 30 outstanding flights. |
| 23 | 1959 | Pierre satre | France | |
| 24 | 1960 | Gagarin, Yuri Alekseevich | the USSR | April 12, 1961 became the first person in world history to fly into outer space [1] [2] . |
| 25 | 1961 | De Haviland, Jeffrey | Great Britain | British aircraft designer, test pilot and entrepreneur, founder of de Havilland Aircraft Company . |
| 1962 | not awarded | | |
| 26 | 1963 | Jacqueline Auriol | France | |
| 27 | 1964 | Kokkinaki, Vladimir Konstantinovich | the USSR | Set 20 world aviation records: in 1936-1937 - 7 records of speed and carrying capacity on the TsKB-26 airplane; in 1958-1960 - 13 records of speed and carrying capacity on an IL-18 airplane |
| 28 | 1965 | Robert L. Stephens | USA | |
| 29th | 1966 | Yakovlev, Alexander Sergeevich | the USSR | Under his leadership, more than 200 types of aircraft were created, of which more than 100 serial ones, on which 86 world records were set at different times. |
| thirty | 1967 | Walker, Joseph | USA | He made two suborbital space flights according to international classification (to an altitude of more than 100 km) and another flight to an altitude of more than 50 miles, which is considered the border of the US Air Force space. August 22, 1963 set a height record for manned aircraft (107 km 960 m), beaten only on October 4, 2004 [3] . The only pilot who lifted the X-15 above the Karman line , that is, into space, and twice (and the total number of X-15 flights was about 200). |
| 31 | 1968 | Ilyushin, Sergey Vladimirovich | the USSR | Under his leadership, many types of bombers ( Il-4 , Il-28 ), attack aircraft ( Il-2 , Il-10 , Il-40 , etc.), passenger aircraft ( Il-12 , Il-14 , Il-18 , IL-62 , etc.) |
| 32 | 1969 | José luis aresti aguirre | Spain | |
| 33 | 1970 | Dick merrill | USA | |
| 34 | 1971 | Elgen long | USA | |
| 35 | 1972 | Popovich, Marina Lavrentievna | the USSR | Set 102 world aviation records on various types of machines. |
| 36 | 1973 | Don anderson | Australia | |
| 37 | 1974 | Fedotov, Alexander Vasilievich | the USSR | On E-166 and MiG-25 aircraft, he set 18 world aviation records (of which three are absolute) in speed, height, load capacity and rate of climb. |
| 38 | 1975 | Curtis pitts | USA | |
| 39 | 1976 | Sholto Hamilton Georgeson | New Zealand | |
| 40 | 1977 | Michael Murphy (aviator) | USA | |
| 41 | 1978 | Hans werner grosse | Germany | |
| 42 | 1979 | Paul maccready | USA | |
| 43 | 1980 | Ann welch | Great Britain | |
| 44 | 1981 | Jean-pierre freiburghaus | Switzerland | |
| 45 | 1982 | Paul poberezny | USA | |
| 46 | 1983 | Jan mikula | Czechoslovakia | |
| 47 | 1984 | Jrd tata | India | |
| 48 | 1985 | Ralph paul alex | USA | |
| 49 | 1986 | Kharlamov, Semyon Ilyich | the USSR | For services to the FAI. From 1973 to 1987, he served as vice president of the FAI. |
| 50 | 1987 | Henry Kremer | Great Britain | |
| 51 | 1988 | August Christov Kabaktchiev | Bnr | |
| 52 | 1989 | Georges Alfred Lloyd | Australia | |
| 53 | 1990 | Gokcen, Sabiha | Turkey | At 23, she became the first female pilot in Turkey [4] and the first woman in the world to be a military fighter pilot. [five] |
| 54 | 1991 | Kyung O Kim | The Republic of Korea | |
| 55 | 1992 | Cenek kepak | Slovakia | |
| 56 | 1993 | Olavi Rautio | Finland | |
| 57 | 1994 | Scott Crossfield | USA | |
| 58 | 1995 | Hanspeter hirzel | Switzerland | |
| 59 | 1996 | Alexander Pimenoff | Finland | |
| 60 | 1997 | Attila Taçoy | Turkey | |
| 1998 | not awarded | | |
| 61 | 1999 | Picard, Bertrand | Switzerland | |
| 62 | 1999 | Brian Jones (aviator) | Great Britain | |
| 63 | 2000 | Eilif ness | Republic of Cyprus | |
| 2001 | not awarded | | |
| 64 | 2002 | Fossett, Steve | USA | |
| 2003 | not awarded | | |
| 65 | 2004 | Jon johanson | Australia | |
| 66 | 2005 | Richard Meredith-Hardy | Great Britain | |
| 67 | 2006 | Smolin, Victor Valentinovich | Russian Federation | The absolute champion of the World, Europe, Russia in aerobatics , the holder of the highest aerobatic sport award - Aresti Cup [6] . |
| 68 | 2007 | Cernan, Eugene | USA | |
| 69 | 2008 | Jiří kobrle | Czech | |
| 70 | 2009 | Barron hilton | USA | |
| 71 | 2010 | David Hempleman-Adams | Great Britain | |
| 72 | 2011 | John Dickenson (aviator) | Australia | |
| 73 | 2012 | Mamistov, Mikhail Vladimirovich | Russian Federation | Pilot of sports airplanes and gliders , absolute champion of the world, Europe, Russia in aerobatics , winner of the highest aerobatics award - Aresti Cup [6] |
| 74 | 2014 | William moyes | Australia | |
| 75 | 2015 | Hans Åkerstedt | Sweden | |