In 1928 he took off in a Travel Air, headed across the Pennsylvania mountains and crashed to his death during bad weather after being struck by lightning.[2][3]
Bernice Gamble Andrews
Bernice Gamble Andrews (1905-1928) died with him as his passenger.[4] She was the beneficiary of his insurance policy, and she was the daughter of George A. Gamble of Williamsport, Pennsylvania. She was previously married to Fred Andrews and had a son: Fred Andrews, Jr. She had worked in Hollywood as Patricia Perry.
^"Titterington dies as plane crashes. Inventor of instruments to make flying safe hits mountain". New York Times. July 12, 1928. Retrieved September 25, 2007. Woman with him killed. She was named beneficiary of insurance policies found on maker of inductor compass. Inventor thrown from plane. Titterington dies as plane crashes. Woman was learning to fly. Hesitated to start flight. Worked to make flying safe. Snyders, Pennsylvania, July 11, 1928. Morris M. Titterington of Brooklyn, one of the best known makers of aeronautical instruments in the country and an inventor of various aviation apparatus, was killed this afternoon ...
^"Died". Time. July 23, 1928. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved September 25, 2007. Morris M. Titterington, 35, and lady friend, in a plane crash at Pottsville, Pennsylvania. He founded the Pioneer Instrument Co., invented the earth inductor compass, said to have made long airplane flights possible.