In or about 1926 or 1927, Fokker moved to the United States. Here he established the North American branch of his company, the
Atlantic Aircraft Corporation. The company gained high visibility in daring exploits by pilots. The
Fokker F.VII aircraft was used by pilot
Richard E. Byrd and machinist
Floyd Bennett to fly over or near the
North Pole on 9 May 1926. In June 1928,
Amelia Earhart crossed the Atlantic to Wales in a Fokker F.VII/3m trimotor, and in 1930
Charles Kingsford Smith circumnavigated the globe in another. However the reputation was hurt when the famous University of Notre Dame football coach
Knute Rockne was killed in
the crash of a Fokker F.10A in March 1931. Fokker's Dutch and American companies were at the peak of their success in the late 1920s, but he lost control by going public to sell stock. In 1929,
General Motors took over Fokker Aircraft Corporation of America, and merged it in the General Aviation Corporation. Fokker was appointed director of engineering. He resigned in 1931. Fokker designs were increasingly outdated and in 1934 General Aviation discontinued their production. They were still built in the Netherlands.
Neville Shute in 1934 negotiated with Fokker for a manufacturing licensing agreement for
Airspeed Ltd (England), and found him "genial, shrewd and helpful" but "already a sick man"; and he was difficult to deal with as "his domestic life was irregular". He worked "at all hours and in strange places". Frequently "his very efficient legal advisor and secretary could not tell us where he was". Shute said he was "a good chooser of men" and had a "most efficient staff of Dutchmen and ex-Germans". Fokker died at age 49 in New York in 1939 from
pneumococcal meningitis, after a three-week-long illness. In 1940, his ashes were brought to Westerveld Cemetery in
Driehuis,
North Holland, where they were buried in the family grave. In 1970, Fokker was inducted into the
International Air & Space Hall of Fame. In 1980, Fokker was inducted into the
National Aviation Hall of Fame in Dayton, Ohio. ==Popular culture==