Bottineau man to be inducted into ND Aviation Hall of Fame
Leo Jostad of Bottineau has been selected for induction into the North Dakota Aviation Hall of Fame.
The N,D. Aviation Hall of Fame committee made the announcement on Thursday.
Jostad will join the prestigious Aviation Hall of Fame group that currently includes 46 other individuals who have all had a significant impact to the growth, development, and promotion of aviation in North Dakota.
The induction ceremony will take place in Fargo at the annual “Fly North Dakota” Conference on Tuesday, March 8, at the Fargo Air Museum. The social will begin at 6 p.m. and the banquet begins at 7 p.m. For more about the state’s aviation conference or to purchase tickets for the awards ceremony, visit https://www.fly-nd.com/events/Conference.
Jostad was born March 2, 1939, in Bottineau. His first flight at age 5 was sitting on his dad’s lap in a Piper J3 Cub flown by flight instructor Bruce Wright. Jostad’s dad earned a private license in an OX-5 powered Curtis Monoplane, and the “seed” had been sown in father and son. Leo Jostad found creative employment opportunities to finance flying lessons while finishing his college degree at North Dakota State University. He still remembers the thrill of his first solo flight.
After completing his bachelor’s degree, he taught music in South Fargo for one year before being commissioned in the U.S. Air Force. Between 1966 and 1969, while stationed at Minot Air Force Base, Jostad earned his commercial and CFI certificates, then was hired by Pietsch Flying Service. Service to his country took him out of North Dakota, where he was stationed at Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan, flying combat sorties in Vietnam and the Tonkin Gulf areas. During this time, he assumed operational responsibilities in the Kadena Aero Club. He was an active general aviation enthusiast and flight instructor, the club maintenance operator for a fleet of 15 aircraft, and test pilot for maintenance-released aircraft. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross twice and the Air Medal 15 times for performance under extremely hazardous conditions during combat operations.
Once stateside, he was involved in Offutt AFB Aero Club where he continued teaching military pilots, young and old, as well as non-pilots, about the beauty, freedoms, and adventures of civil aviation. After 24 years of service, Jostad retired from the Air Force with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He continued providing flight instruction over the next several years in Omaha at Offutt Aero Club.
In 1988, the family moved back to North Dakota. Over the following years, Jostad was approached to act as chief pilot and director of Flight Operations for Farstad Oil Co. and later with Food Management Investors. Between his corporate flying positions, he acted as chief certified flight instructor at Northern Plains Aviation in Minot. The Federal Aviation Administration’s part 141 flight school was a labor of love and a source of pride for Jostad.
Jostad has taught and mentored several international students, local students, his daughters, and two granddaughters. He has been a principal member of his community, participating with the church, music, veterans, and the famed Club de Skinatique, of which he is a founding member. He is acting president of the Bottineau Municipal Airport Authority, spearheading many improvement projects for local general aviation. In addition to providing medical flights to those in need, Jostad regularly donates plane rides for the Evergreen Scholarship fundraiser earning the Friend of Education Award from Dakota College at Bottineau.