William P. and Moya Olsen Lear Correspondence and Journal
Contents of the Collection
The William P. and Moya Olsen Lear Correspondence and Journal consists primarily of personal letters and one journal that document the early relationship between inventor and entrepreneur William "Bill" P. Lear and Moya Olsen Lear. The bulk of the material dates from 1939 to 1942, the years leading up to their marriage on January 5, 1942.
The collection comprises approximately 150 letters, the majority of which were written by Bill Lear to Moya Olsen during their courtship. Because there are so few letters written by Moya present the correspondence reveal one half of a conversation with a focus on personal thoughts, feelings and viewpoints from Bill's side of their often tumultuous relationship. The letters also include some social news and occasional references to his professional endeavors. The correspondence provides a unique insight into William P. Lear, not as a businessman, but as an individual and romantic partner, and later as a husband and father. Post-1942 (when they married), there are far fewer letters (less than 50) but they continue in the same vein of topics: the relationship between Bill and Moya, family, day-to-day activities, and work. Five of the letters were written by Moya to Bill and two are written by Bill to Ole Olsen, Moya’s father, which also touch upon interpersonal relationships as well as social and family news.
In addition to the correspondence, the collection includes a 27-page journal that primarily functioned as a day planner. The entries, which span from 1974 to 1976, are mostly in Bill Lear’s handwriting and contain brief daily notes about meetings, phone calls, conversations, and work-related activities. Though the journal documents more business activities than the correspondence, it does not provide a deep look into his professional work. Some entries are in Moya Olsen Lear’s handwriting, with a few written by an unidentified hand. There are also a few pieces of ephemera, including notes on an automatic pilot device; a handwritten poem by Moya Olsen Lear titled “My Bill”; a published letter to the editor by Tina Lear reflecting on Moya as a mother; two floral delivery cards; and two pen-and-ink sketches of a dressing room.
Dates
- Creation: 1939-1993, undated
- Creation: Majority of material found within 1939-1942
Creator
- Lear, William P. (William Powell), 1902-1978 (Author, Person)
- Lear, Moya Olsen, 1915-2001 (Author, Person)
Conditions Governing Access
This collection is open for research and is accessible in the Dahlberg Research Center by appointment. For more information contact us.
Conditions Governing Use
The Museum of Flight (TMOF) Archives is the owner of the physical materials in the archives and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from TMOF archives before any publication use. TMOF does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from copyright owners. Consult repository for more details.
Biographical Note: Moya Olsen Lear
Moya Marie Olsen Lear was a philanthropist, businesswoman, and the wife of aviation pioneer William P. Lear.
Moya Marie Olsen was born on March 27, 1915 in Chicago, Illinois to John Sigvard “Ole” Olsen (1892-1963), a famous vaudevillian, and Lillian Louise (Clem) Olsen (1890-1990). She attended Ohio State University for a single year and then completed Pace Institute in New York for shorthand and typing. In her own words, Olsen worked as a “Girl Friday” (office assistant) for her father on his Broadway show, Hellzapoppin’. It was here, through her father's show, she met Bill Lear.
Moya and Bill's first meeting had been brief; Lear had come backstage at the 46th Street Theater one night, in September 1938, to offer his regards to Olsen for the evening's show and her father introduced the two. Moya wrote, "No angels sang. No bells chimed. No fireworks went off." It was just a quick greeting and they parted. However, on their second meeting on December 24th, 1938 Bill invited Moya out for a drink and their relationship took off.
Olsen married Bill Lear in 1942, becoming his fourth wife. In spite of Bill's infidelities, Moya "loved Bill with an intense, unconditional love" and the couple had four children together (John, Shanda, David, and Tina) in addition to Lear’s children from previous marriages (Mary Louise, Bill, Jr., and Patti). Although Bill gave Moya a place as a board member for his various companies, she remained mostly only tangentially involved in his work during his lifetime, primarily acting as a welcoming, stable, and supportive presence to Lear and his partners, employees, and contacts. Various positions she held included serving on the Board of Directors for Lear Jet Corporation and as Vice-President.
After Lear’s death, she was made Chairman of the Board of LearAvia Corporation, the parent company of Lear Fan, and attempted to take his final project, the Lear Fan, through completion and FAA certification, but was ultimately unsuccessful.
Moya was active in many philanthropic causes, particularly in the Reno, Nevada area where the Lears lived near the end of their lives, including serving on the boards of the Nevada Opera Association, the Nevada Festival Ballet and the Sierra Arts Foundation. She established the Bill and Moya Lear Foundation Scholarship Fund and used her Amelia Earhart Pioneering Achievement Award to fund scholarships for women majoring in aeronautical science at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, where she also established the Moya and Bill Lear Endowed Scholarship.
Additional honors include her inductions into the halls of fame of such organizations as the Women in Aviation Pioneers, the United States Achievement Academy, Nevada Business Leaders and the Nevada Women’s Fund and six honorary doctorates: Doctor of Humane Letters from National University, San Diego and University of Nevada, Reno; Doctor of Laws from Northrop University, Los Angeles, Pepperdine University, Los Angeles, and Clemson University, South Carolina; and Doctor of Aviation Management from Embry-Riddle, Daytona Beach. She was also the first winner of the Katherine Wright Memorial Award in 1981.
Moya Olsen Lear died on December 5, 2001 in Nevada.
Sources:
Lear, Moya. An Unforgettable Flight. Reno: Jack Bacon and Company, 1996.
"Memorializing Aviation Pioneer and Philanthropist Moya Lear." Nevada Legislature. March 26, 2003. Accessed November 18, 2020. https://www.leg.state.nv.us/Session/72nd2003/Journal/Senate/Final/sj052.html.
"Philanthropist widow of Learjet developer dies at 86." Napa Valley Register. December 7, 2001. Accessed November 18, 2020. hhttps://napavalleyregister.com/news/local/obituaries/philanthropist-widow-of-learjet-developer-dies-at-86/article_7ec9325e-a668-51c1-b877-82d1289d7aeb.html.
Rashke, Richard. Stormy Genius: The Life of Aviation's Maverick, Bill Lear. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985.
Biographical Note: William Powell Lear
William P. “Bill” Lear was a prolific inventor with dozens of patents for a variety of machines to his name but is most famous for his work in the aviation field. He produced the Learjet, the first mass-produced business jet, and the Lear Fan, an innovative turboprop plane built from lightweight composite materials. He also helped to develop autopilot and automatic landing systems for jets. But his interests went beyond aviation: he is also known for being the inventor of the 8-track tape cartridge, the car radio, and innovative developments on turbine motors.
Born on June 26, 1902 in Hannibal, Missouri, Bill Lear had a humble background that would belie his later success. His father, Reuben Lear (1878-1955), a teamster and builder, struggled to support his family and had a tumultuous relationship with his wife, Gertrude Elizabeth Powell Lear (1884-1934), and they eventually separated. As a boy Lear taught himself things like electrical engineering and experimented on his own with building radio receivers. Though he never received a high school diploma, his childhood fascination with radios led to work in the field. He lied about his age in order to join the U.S. Navy at age 16. After a brief stint in the Navy and some early business partnerships, he founded his first company, Lear Radio Laboratories. During the Great Depression of the 1920s, Lear’s engineering savvy and business acumen provided him with great success at a time when others struggled. He invented the first practical car radio and the first radio remote control, the “Lazy Boy.” It was during this time that he also bought his first airplane, inspiring him to turn his sights toward flight navigation. Lear invented the Lear-o-scope which allowed pilots to navigate via radio. The Lear-o-scope was used by Amelia Earhart to help her fly from Los Angeles to Mexico City and from there on record-setting flights to New York and Washington, D.C. Lear continued to design navigational devices under his company Lear Avia Inc. with orders from airline companies all over the world.
By 1945 his company had transformed into Lear, Incorporated. Among their products was the Learecorder, cited by the New York Times as “the most versatile home musical reproduction machine ever built.” While the market for his music record and navigation equipment was limited, electromechanical sales kept the company afloat. Lear turned to developing autopilot systems determined to make flying, especially military flight, safer. This led to the development of the F-5 autopilot, for which he won the 1950 Collier Trophy. In the early 1950s, Lear bought a Lockheed Lodestar and massively redesigned it, renaming it Learstar. Its maiden flight was on May 10, 1954 and it was the first reconditioned aircraft to receive Civil Aeronautics Association certification as an airline transport plane. The Learstar was also the fastest twin-engine transport with the longest range under production at the time.
Lear moved his family to Switzerland in 1959 to break into the European market and successfully sold his automatic flight control system for use in Fokker, Fiat, Saab and Caravelle aircraft. Due to disagreements over the design of what would become his iconic Learjet with the Lear Incorporated board, he was forced out of the company in 1962. He then founded yet another company, Swiss American Aviation Corporation, originally based in Switzerland, to continue to develop the Learjet as he envisioned it. Just two years later, Lear renamed the company Lear Jet Corporation and relocated to Wichita, Kansas to build the Learjet which he dreamed would be a lightweight, efficient, and luxurious small business aircraft. The first flight was on October 7, 1963.
Just after the Learjet Model 23 was FAA-certified and the company began trading publicly, Lear was inspired by a 4-track automobile dashboard-mounted tape player to improve on the technology, and began work on what would become the 8-track cassette player. His machine was smaller, simpler, and cheaper than the existing options. With new patents acquired, he marketed his radio-tape-player combination, striking a deal with RCA and Ford Motor Company. After selling Lear Jet Corp. to the Gates Rubber Company in April 1967, Lear moved to Reno, Nevada where he switched gears and turned to both land development and steam-powered cars, attempting to improve upon the combustion engine with a steam-powered design.
In his seventies by this point, he suffered from numerous physical ailments which brought on depression, affecting his business ventures. Despite flagging health and because of failures with his steam-motor endeavors, he turned back to aviation. In 1976, he struck a deal with Canadair to develop the LearStar 600, a small, long-distance business jet. Canadair bought the design and evetually renamed the aircraft the Challenger CL-600. Lear worked on the development of the Lear Allegro design, as an improvement on the LearStar 600, hoping to also enter a deal with Canadair. However, they had no interest in the Allegro and ultimately none were ever built. It was then Lear began work on the Lear Fan, a plane innovative because of its all-composite body, Y-shaped tail, and pusher-style propeller.
After three previous marriages and many affairs, Bill Lear had married Moya Olsen in 1942. Though she was not involved in his business at first, she “exerted a stabilizing influence on his volatile life.” In later companies, she held board and executive positions. With his health rapidly declining in the 1970s and the Lear Fan still in development, Lear set up a trust to ensure the continued development of the Lear Fan after his death. Lear eventually died from leukemia in Reno on May 14, 1978. Moya retained a role in the company, as Chairman of the Board, to ensure fulfillment of Bill’s vision. Despite the innovative design of the plane and further investments, the Lear Fan never received FAA certification or went into production.
Over the course of his life Lear received many awards. Among them were the 1950 Collier Trophy from the National Aeronautic Association; the Cresson Medal of the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia; the Frank M. Hawks Award for an outstanding contribution to aircraft navigation; the 1954 Horatio Alger Award; the Silver Medal of Paris in 1960; and the bronze Thulin Medal from the Swedish Aeronautical Society. While his varied career was full of ups and downs and not all of his ideas came to fruition, biographer Richard Rashke writes, “Lear’s contribution to general aviation…was significant. He and his engineers had pioneered generation after generation of instruments. But even more important, Lear almost single-handedly dragged the whole industry forward with him, challenging its concepts, expanding its horizons, forcing it to see his vision and to improve its products.”
Sources:
“Bill Lear.” Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, June 30, 2022. Accessed August 2, 2022. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Lear.
Rashke, Richard. Stormy Genius: The Life of Aviation's Maverick, Bill Lear. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985.
“William P. Lear.” Encyclopædia Britannica. Accessed August 9, 2022. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/333965/William-P-Lear.
Lear, Moya. An Unforgettable Flight. Reno: Jack Bacon and Company, 1996.
Extent
1.25 Cubic Feet (2 5-inch legal size document boxes, 1 2-inch legal size document box)
Language
English
Abstract
The William P. and Moya Olsen Lear Correspondence and Journal consists primarily of personal letters and one journal that document the early relationship between inventor and entrepreneur William "Bill" P. Lear and Moya Olsen Lear. The bulk of the material dates from 1939 to 1942, the years leading up to their marriage on January 5, 1942.
Note on Arrangement
The collection has been divided into two parts by format: Journal and Correspondence. Correspondence has been arranged chronologically. The archivist tried to estimate dates for undated materials based on content and contextual clues, such as letterheads and postal cachets. These materials were placed as close to their estimated date as possible. Undated materials that could not be dated were placed at the end of the collection.
Accruals
No further accruals are expected.
Processing Information
The collection arrived in no discernible order. For undated materials, the processing archivist imposed a chronological order and used correspondence topics, postage cachets, and related Lear collections to provide approximate dates when able. Some items remain undated and are grouped together at the end of correspondence. For consistency in undated letters, "Moya Olsen Lear" is the default name used. Materials arrived in sleeves. To provide better access for researchers the multi-page letters were removed from sleeves and interleaved with acid-free paper.
Subject
- Lear, Moya Olsen, 1915-2001 (Person)
- Lear, William P. (William Powell), 1902-1978 (Person)
- Olsen, Ole, 1892-1963 (Person)
- Title
- Guide to the William P. and Moya Olsen Lear Correspondence and Journal
- Status
- Completed Level 2
- Author
- Jenn Parent
- Date
- 2025 July
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Edition statement
- 1st Edition
Repository Details
Part of the The Museum of Flight Archives Repository
9404 East Marginal Way South
Seattle Washington 98108-4097
206-764-5874
curator@museumofflight.org