Oskar Bider grew up in Langenbruck and graduated from the primary school to the district school in Waldenburg. He had no interest in his father's business as draper and preferred to become a farmer; he attended the Agricultural School in Langenthal and then worked on several farms. Having completed the primary military service in Switzerland in June 1911, he decided to emigrate to Argentina and worked in 1911/12 as a gaucho on the farm of a Swiss citizen living in Romang, Santa Fe.
Aviation pioneer
Driven by ambition and nostalgia, Oskar returned to Europe in 1912. On November 8 of that year he joined Blériot's aviation school in Pau, situated in the northern Pyrenees. After one month of training he earned an international pilot's licence on December 8, 1912 with Swiss pilot's licence number 32. He later bought a Blériot XI monoplane, and on January 24, 1913, pioneered in crossing the Pyrenees from Pau to Madrid. In March 1913 he returned to Switzerland by train, welcomed at the border in Basel as a much-admired 'aviation hero'. On March 9 he flew the first airmail flight in Switzerland from Basel to Liestal. Later that year on May 13 he crossed the Alps from Bern to Sion, Switzerlandfor the first time. Emile Taddéoli lost a wheel while taking off to fly from Bern to Biel/Bienne on June 3, 1913. Bider witnessed the incident and took off with the wheel to catch up with Taddéoli and warn him of the danger. Taddéoli acknowledged and landed without a problem in Biel/Bienne.
First Alpine flight
Bider's big goal was crossing the Alps from Bern to Milano which had been attempted three years earlier by fellow aviation pioneer Jorge Chávez. He prepared for this ambitious flight carefully and left nothing to chance. His first attempt did not happen as planned because a prior test flight showed that his airplane, with a 70-hp engine and full fuel tanks could not reach the required altitude in the thin mountain air. He decided to stop halfway in Domodossola to refuel and finish the flight. On July 13, 1913—one day after his 22nd birthday—he took off at 4 a.m. in Bern for Italy. The Jungfraujoch was the greatest obstacle for this flight and for over half an hour Bider struggled desperately before he finally reached the required altitude of resulting in a new Swiss record. At 6:10 a.m. he passed the top of Jungfraujoch with about of clearance. He stopped in Domodossola for fuel as planned and then finished his journey in Milano. He waited 13 days in Milano for good weather conditions and then flew back this time crossing Lukmanier Pass and Chrüzli Pass in northern Switzerland. He landed in Liestal to refuel and continued on to Basel and then to Bern. Bider thus became the first aviator to cross the Alps in both directions.
Other records
Continuing his pioneering streak, on August 1, 1913, Bider completed the first night flight in Switzerland. On Christmas Day 1913, Bider set a new record flying from Paris to Bern in 4 hours and 20 minutes non-stop. On June 21, 1919, Bider accomplished another great aviation performance in benefit of the civil aviation: he started with two passengers in St. Jakob, Basel, for a flight around Switzerland, landing successfully after seven and a half hours at the starting point.
Commercial services
Oskar Bider and Fritz Rihner started the Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Lufttourismus in July 1919. Tour flights—using flying boats—were planned from sites at Zürichhorn, Geneva, Interlaken/Thun, Locarno, Lugano, Lucerne, Lausanne-Ouchy, Romanshorn and St. Moritz. Unfortunately, Oskar would be killed in a plane crash before the ambitious project was realized.
Death
In the early morning of July 7, 1919, Bider left the officers' mess at Dübendorf airfield. He had spent the previous few days celebrating the completion of his service in the Swiss Air Force, which had ended on July 2. But before starting the commercial tourist flights, he wanted to put on an aerobatic display for his former military colleagues. So after a sleepless night at 6.30am he took off in a Nieuport 21 fighter for the demonstration. However, during a manoeuvre his plane entered an unrecoverable stall causing it to crash into the ground killing Bider instantly. When news of his death reached his devoted 25-year-old sister, Julie Helene "Leny" Bider, she shot herself that afternoon in her room at the Hotel Bellevue au Lac, in Zürich. Oskar and Leny Bider were buried together in their hometown of Langenbruck on July 10, 1919. Mystery still surrounds the death of Bider because the exact circumstances of his crash were never publicized for decades. A crash investigation found that the plane's engine and control cables were all in working order at the time. As mechanical issues were not the cause, the official report theorized that the swiftness of one of Bider's manoeuvres probably resulted in his loss of consciousness. However, this conclusion has been questioned because it was not published until decades after Bider's death and to the leadership of the Swiss Army "a military pilot and aviator does not take his life!".
Honors
In Bern, a monument designed by Hermann Haller remembers Bider's aeronautical services. Several streets were named after him: "Oskar Bider-Strasse" in Langenbruck, Dübendorf, Liestal and Zürich and "rue Oscar Bider" in Sion and Geneva. Among other Swiss air pioneers, he is commemorated with a Swiss postage stamp issued in 1977. The Bider-Hangar, called after Oskar, one of the hangars at Bern Airport, is listed as a heritage site in the November 2008 review draft of the Swiss Inventory of Cultural Property of National and Regional Significance.