He was born on December 3, 1891, in
Geneva, Pennsylvania and grew up in
Grove City. In May 1922, Lieutenant Oakley G. Kelly and Lieutenant
John Arthur Macready were awarded the 1922
Mackay Trophy for the beating the world's air endurance record and staying aloft for 36 hours, 4 minutes, and 32 seconds. On May 2, 1923, Lieutenants Kelly and Macready departed in their single-engined, high-wing Army
Fokker T-2 from from
Mitchel Field,
New York, and landed in
San Diego, California, on May 3 after a flight of 26 hours, 50 minutes and 38 seconds, setting the record for transcontinental flight by a heavier-than-air craft winning the 1923
Mackay Trophy. In October 1924, Kelly piloted
Ezra Meeker along portions of the
Oregon Trail to generate support for marking and preserving the historic route using a
de Havilland DH.4 biplane. Traveling by air at 100 mph, Meeker traveled the same distance in an hour that had taken him a week to travel by ox at 2 mph. Between 1924 and 1929, Kelly was the squadron commander for the
321st Observation Squadron at
Pearson Field,
Vancouver, Washington. == References ==