Women In Aviation
Even in aviation's early days, women pilots equaled male pilots in displays
of ambition, skill and fortitude. Amelia Earhart and Jacqueline Cochran come
readily to mind. In commercial aviation, however, women were for many years
restricted to "women's jobs" as flight attendant, reservations agent,
etc.
Since the early days of aviation, women have been active participants. One of
the most famous figures in aviation history is Amelia Earhart. She won early
acclaim by becoming the first woman to fly across the Atlantic in 1928, but her
success was marred by the fact that two male pilots had actually been at the
controls throughout the flight. Earhart compensated for this by achieving many
record-breaking flights, and eventually she flew solo across the Atlantic. She
was lost at sea while attempting to fly around the world in 1937.
Despite the accomplishments of Earhart and other courageous and skilled
female pilots-notably those who ferried aircraft across the United States and to
Europe during World War II-the aviation industry for many years tended to hire
women for only a few positions such as flight attendant and reservations agent.
While these jobs continue to attract many women (as well as men), women today
are finding wider ranging opportunities in all segments of aviation.
On the page that follows, you'll hear from women who have successfully
pursued a variety of interesting and rewarding aviation careers.
Amy M. Carmien is president and publisher of the magazine Women in Aviation
(not connected with these pages).
"I began my aeronautical career with flight lessons at age 16. Following
high school, I attended Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University at Daytona Beach,
Florida, where I earned degrees in Aviation Maintenance Management, Aviation
Business Administration, and Aviation Maintenance Technology. In addition to my
pilot certificate, I have an airframe and powerplant (A&P) mechanic
certificate."
"While at Embry-Riddle, I was awarded an Aviation Maintenance
fellowship. Through the fellowship program, I assisted in the instruction of
engine installation and troubleshooting. During this same time, I participated
in the National Transportation Safety Board's student co-op program. Both of
these programs allowed me to continue my education while gaining practical
aviation experience.
"Throughout my education, I've been involved with writing and journalism
courses. For me, journalism provides a positive balance with the more technical
aspects of aviation."
"After working with the NTSB and as an A&P mechanic, I began
researching the idea of an aviation publication devoted to the accomplishments
of women in the field. That research led to the publication of Women in
Aviation."
"The primary purpose of Women in Aviation is to acknowledge
contributions from women in all sectors of aviation, regardless of their flight
or non-flight status. Our subjects have included, in addition to pilots, an
all-female skydiving team, a naval aviator, a balloon captain, and an A&P
mechanic. The magazine also has a book review section, a student spotlight
feature, and a flight anecdote column."
"In addition to my Women in Aviation activities, I serve as an advisor
to the International Women's Air and Space Museum at Centerville, Ohio. I edit
the museum's Quarterly newsletter and handle various other projects."
"Overall, I feel very fortunate to be able to combine my diverse
interests in aviation. As a publisher, l am able to draw from my flying and
mechanical experience as well as my accident investigation knowledge and
business experience. I thoroughly enjoy meeting women in various aviation
fields, and I look forward to continued growth in the future."
Mary G. Kelly is the manager of an airport in Oklahoma.
"As a mother and teacher, at the age of 34, I took a family vacation to
Washington, D.C. That trip marked a turning point in my career and life."
"A full day in the National Air and Space Museum caught hold of me like
nothing I'd ever experienced. I was, for the first time in my life, completely
entranced by the spirit of flight. That summer thirteen years ago, I returned to
my home in Louisville, Kentucky, looked up a flight school in the yellow pages,
and made an appointment for my first flying lesson."
"From that first lesson, the world as I had known it began to change. I
discovered not only a new perspective from which to view the world, but a
learning process that would excite, challenge, and stretch my abilities. Within
three years, I made the leap from classroom teacher to flight instructor."
"My family was a little bewildered by this new endeavor on my part. I
was the first pilot in the family, although I'm hoping to encourage some of my
nieces and nephews to learn to fly."
'My family would attest to the fact that I've always had a strong will and
have been goal-oriented. My tenacity, however, seemed to increase as I pursued
additional aviation ratings and certificates. When I passed the certified flight
instructor checkride, I made another leap: I decided to leave Kentucky, which
had been my home for more than fifteen years. Recently divorced, I was ready for
a new beginning."
"My brother, a farmer in southwest Oklahoma, invited me to be a farm
hand while I was deciding what to do next. I was put to work (I called it hard
labor) getting the cotton crop to the gin. When the work was done, my brother
introduced me to the aviation people in the area."
"In a relatively short time, I was hired as a copilot for the small
commuter airlines flying round-trip daily to Oklahoma City. The owners of the
local airline service also owned a Part 141 flight school. They wanted to sell
it. I knew the airport was where I wanted to be, so I took another leap of faith
and bought the school."
"The year that followed brought long hours, few days off, little money,
but plenty of self satisfaction. Then the next opportunity arose: the position
of airport manager became vacant. I pursued that job energetically and was
hired!"
"With the help of an Amelia Earhart Scholarship from the International
99's, I obtained a degree in airport management from Western Oklahoma State
College while I was on the job."
"New opportunities continued to present themselves. I met a wonderful
man, Joe Cunningham, who helped me commemorate Amelia Earhart's 1932 flight
across the North Atlantic-a trip that I had wanted to make since I started
flying. Joe and l set a world and national record on that flight in a Cessna 172
RG."
"I followed Amelia's tracks in the United States, landing at Hatbox
Field in Muskogee, Oklahoma, where she had visited friends. I managed Oklahoma's
oldest and most historic airport for a period of time."
"A little more than a year after our transatlantic trip, Joe and I were
married and set another world and national record, commemorating the 53rd
anniversary of the Wiley Post/Will Rogers flight to Barrow, Alaska. The record
course, which we flew in our own Cherokee 180, was from Rogers' birthplace to
the crash site where lie and Post were killed."
"Presently, I am managing a resort grass strip on Lake Tenkiller in
northeast Oklahoma. Joe and I publish a monthly aviation newsletter that is
distributed to all the pilots in the state. He is a state aeronautics
commissioner."
"From president of the Future Teachers of America when I was in high
school to the President of the Oklahoma Airport Operators Association and
President of the Associated Pilots of Oklahoma, I have made some big leaps, and
I have lived the adventures that life offers in the world of flight."
"There were many moments in my aviation journey when I was afraid. I
discovered that by pushing through that fear came courage. Among Amelia
Earhart's compositions is a poem entitled Courage. The first line of that poem
stays with me as I take each leap before me: 'Courage is the price which life
exacts for granting peace.' The full meaning of that statement was understood
when I finally spotted the distant hazy shore of Ireland after hours and hours
of flying over the ocean. It is a joy to emulate a personal hero and, in the
process, find that those qualities you admired are your own."
Kathryn D. Sullivan, Ph.D., is a NASA astronaut, Lt. Commander in the U.S.
Naval Reserve, and adjunct professor of geology at Rice University, Houston,
Texas.
"I come from a flying family. My father was a bomber pilot in World War
II, and a couple of his brothers were pilots. He left the service under an
arrangement that gave him a private pilot certificate. Ever since we were very
little, my brother and I have had a keen interest in planes. We grew up with a
lot of talk about airplanes around the house, since my father, a pilot and an
engineer, worked on a variety of aerospace projects. When we were about 10, he
activated his private pilot certificate so he could get to good fishing spots
faster."
"My brother and I were thrilled to be able to go up in airplanes, and we
rapidly learned a lot about flying because my father would explain everything to
us. We became accustomed to handling the controls and to paying attention to the
kinds of things that a pilot must do when conducting a flight. "
"The family plan was that each of us would get our pilot's license
during the summer we finished high school. It didn't work out for me until years
later, because I was involved with many activities and often lived in places
that had awful weather or airports that were far away. It seemed to me that I
needed a certain amount of time and money to devote to that effort in a
consistent fashion, or I would just end up dabbling at it. Dabbling is not a
very safe thing to do in flying. You have to make sure you've got the time and
resources to practice and to keep your skills up to date. It's not something at
which you want to become rusty."
"My academic interests didn't follow an aviation slant at all. By the
second grade I was interested in scientific experiments. Around fifth or sixth
grade I began to find that I had an interest in, and talent for, foreign
languages. I also wanted to explore the world and learn about other
countries."
"In eighth grade we had a guidance unit in which I found out for the
first time that if you were smart and went to college, you could study abroad
for one year. I decided that I was going to attend Stanford University and go to
Europe to study in my third year of college. I looked at my grades and told
myself to get going. My grades went from A's and B's to all A's and stayed there
through high school. It was simply a matter of desire; I knew what I wanted and
I knew I had to work for it.,'
"Primarily because of finances, I ended up attending the University of
California at Santa Cruz in my home state. Fortunately for me, the University of
California required science and humanities majors to take a few courses on the
other side of the fence just so students didn't get too narrow-minded."
"I took courses in marine biology, oceanography, and geology. Geology
was my major. I went abroad as a junior, studied for a year in Norway, and ended
up a graduate student at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia.
"In my final year of graduate school, when I was down in the States
visiting my parents at Christmas, my brother came up to me and said, 'Hey, NASA
is hiring new astronauts and they want scientists. You've got a Ph.D., you're in
geology, you' re a woman and they want women. You should try it."
"I found out that the role of mission specialist astronaut is
essentially the chief scientist for a space research vessel. I had discovered
through my years in marine research that this was the kind of thing I thrived
on. To have the opportunity to exercise all those same qualities and make
similar discoveries from a research vessel in space just couldn't be passed up.
So along with about 6,500 other people, I applied in January 1977 for the job of
mission specialist astronaut. Following an extensive evaluation and examination
period, 120 potential candidates were interviewed for the job. Then, in January
1978, came the incredible phone call: 'About that job: are you still
interested?' Needless to say, I accepted."
"My interest in exploration and my interdisciplinary background are
probably two of the major reasons why I was selected for NASA's astronaut
program. Looking at your papers and transcripts, the selection committee
can tell if you are basically an intelligent person with the right education
or professional background. The next question is whether your inclinations and
temperament are suited to the kinds of activities you're asked to do as an
astronaut.
"The astronauts job is highly interdisciplinary. We're really the people
who sit at the ends of many different funnels that various engineers in the
thousands are working on. We must make sure that everything fits together
properly and works together properly. The human factors engineering, integration
and development of procedures, and writing of the checklists are the kinds of
things that astronauts get involved in while preparing for flights on the space
shuttle. Those things demand that you keep a very broad view."
"The person you owe something to is yourself. The person who's going to
benefit or be harmed by your doing a good or bad job is you. That's true in
every class you take or every job that you do, whether it seems small or
big."
"It's that commitment to make the most of your talents that gives you
the most return. It's like putting money in a bank account that then allows you
to buy back vast amounts of knowledge, entertainment, joy, pleasure and
excitement, by being able to go off in the world and make use of these things in
your day-to-day life."
"Challenge yourself! Do things that stretch your abilities. You will get
a lot back."
Dr. Peggy Baty, Associate Vice President and Dean at Parks College of St.
Louis University, in Cahokia, Illinois.
"I grew up in Southern California, but decided to attend a small college
in Tennessee to major in education. It wasn't until my senior year in college
that! took my first airplane ride in a 1946 Ercoupe, a two-seat, low-wing
airplane with a canopy top. It was love at first flight. That winter I began
taking flying lessons in the Ercoupe at the Collegedale Airport outside of
Chattanooga, Tennessee."
"When I told my family of my intention to enter the world of aviation,
my mother sent me a clipping from the Chicago Tribune describing the benefits
available to flight attendants. I wrote back that! had no intention of being in
the back of the airplane when I could be the captain." "With
approximately twelve hours of flying under my belt, I began to take aerobatic
instruction from Bill Kershner, the well-known aviation author and aerobatic
instructor, in Sewanee, Tennessee. Learning to do spins, rolls, loops, Cuban 8s,
snap rolls on top of loops, hammerheads, and other aerobatic maneuvers was truly
a high point.
"It was Bill Kershner who first told me about the opportunities for
earning a college degree in aviation and of the aviation department at Middle
Tennessee State University. So that fall I enrolled in the Aviation
Administration program at MTSU, teaching ground school classes both in Tennessee
and Alabama. One such class met in a little airport in Stevenson, Alabama."
"I was back in the airport manager's office discussing final de tails
for space allocations and supplies as the students were arriving. When I walked
out to the classroom and placed my notes on the podium, I overhead one of the
students say, 'You mean we have a lady teaching us how to fly?' It was then that
I realized that the entire class was composed of men."
"I graduated from Middle Tennessee State University with a BA in
Aviation Administration in May 1980. On graduation day the department chair
asked me if I had plans to work on a Masters degree and indicated the
possibility of a partial scholarship if I did so. That summer I enrolled in the
Aerospace Education Masters program at MTSU."
"One of the requirements for this particular degree program was a course
designed not so much for aviation students as it was for school teachers. I was
really impressed with the motivating power of this course on these teachers'
lives and their enthusiasm to take aviation back to their own classrooms and use
it with their students. This one course probably had the most influence on my
life regarding my desire to promote aviation education and to encourage others
to support it as well."
"I completed the Masters degree in December of 1980 with the
determination to combine my two career interests: aviation and education. Over
the next several months, I went on to attain instrument, commercial, and flight
instructor certificates and ratings in single and multi-engine airplanes. My
husband Bruce, and l began an aviation consulting business and flight school in
Chattanooga."
"As a fight instructor I encountered a number of interesting responses.
For example, upon flying into an airport in Georgia with a female flight
student, a gentleman in the fixed base operation asked, 'Where's the pilot?' And
when flying with a male student on a cross-country flight, upon landing and
securing the plane, a lineman would inevitably walk up to the student and ask if
he needed any fuel, etc. They assumed that he was pilot in command."
"I wanted to become more involved with aviation education, particularly
at the collegiate level, so I went back to school. This time I enrolled at the
University of Tennessee in their Educational Administration and Supervision
doctoral program in the summer of 1982. I graduated in August 1985."
"Later that month I was hired as Chairman of the Aviation Administration
Department at Georgia State University in Atlanta. I proceeded to initiate a
flight simulator training pro gram, an air traffic control course, a flight
training arrangement with the Georgia Tech flying club, non-credit ground school
courses, Flight Instructor Refresher Clinics, and 'Aviation Days in Georgia,' a
program that brought the aviation community in Atlanta together."
"One year later I moved to Daytona Beach, Florida, to accept a position
in the Aeronautical Science Department at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
I initiated a teacher workshop program and a host of other projects, and was
promoted to Associate Dean of Aca demics."
"I am currently Chief Administrator at Parks College of St. Louis
University."
"You are limited only by your dreams and your willingness to see them
through."
Dr. Emily R. Morey-Holton is a research scientist at the NASA-Ames Research
Center in Moffett Field, California.
"I've always been impressed by individuals who focus on a particular
career goal early in life and pursue and achieve that goal. Others, like myself,
find exciting but unanticipated careers by pure luck. I began my education in
Parkersburg, West Virginia. Parkersburg High School was academically outstanding
and ahead of its time in the breadth of courses offered. When I graduated from
high school, I was quite sure that twelve years of primary and secondary
education were sufficient, and I was not anxious to continue my schooling.
Fortunately, my parents disagreed and packed me off to West Virginia University
where my initial major was undecided."
"I have also been extremely fortunate to have had very supportive family
members, friends, mentors, collaborators, and co-workers. In fact, my college
advisor, Dr. Peter Popovich, suggested that I consider spending a year at
Harvard Medical School as a technician when I finished college and still was not
sure what I wanted to do. He also told me that the Pharmacology Department at
the new medical school at West Virginia University had some fellowships
available for graduate study."
"After a year in Boston, I returned to WVU and to the Pharmacology
Department. The department instilled a love of teaching and planted the seeds
for a research career, but those seeds did not germinate for several years. Upon
completion of my degrees, I taught and did research at other medical
schools."
"In the late sixties, I moved to the Eastern Shore of Maryland. I
quickly learned that a person could actually be overeducated for jobs in certain
areas of the country and that those areas did not know or care about the
National Institutes of Health and grants-a most humbling experience. One day, in
sheer desperation, I jumped into the car and drove to a small NASA launch
facility on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. I went straight to the Wallops
Station personnel office and said, 'Please hire me!' and to my amazement,
several weeks later they did."
"During one of my first meetings with Dr. Bob Krieger, director of the
facility, he said, 'There's space, now do something significant.' A big task for
a small lady. I spent the next five years as the only Life Scientist on the
base, where I learned to talk to engineers and launch personnel. Their language
is, indeed, different. But I was very impressed by their dedication, hard work,
and adherence to launch and planning schedules. Working with them in designing
unmanned biological satellites, I developed a much greater appreciation for the
type of biological data that engineers need, and I began to understand the
complexity of satellite design."
"When the research focus of the Station began to change, I requested a
transfer to NASA's primary facility for basic life sciences research at Ames
Research Center in California. The management at Wallops agreed to the transfer,
gave me a promotion, and sent me to California, where I am now happily
employed."
"I am very fortunate to have ended up with a job that is exciting,
demanding, and very rewarding, and where I can use both my formal science and
informal engineering background."
Jeana Yeager was co-pilot on the Voyager, the first aircraft to fly around
the world non-stop.
"Once upon a time...I didn't actually grow up with aviation, like most
people. It wasn't until I was about 26. I've always been fascinated with
helicopters, and I had a crazy desire to fly them. I went down to school in
Santa Rosa, California, and found a company that had helicopters. They convinced
me I should get the fixed-wing rating first. For whatever reason it's better to
have the helicopter rating as an add-on, instead of getting the fixed-wing
rating as an add-on. So anyway, I got my rating in fixed wing, but the company
was on financial hard times and I didn't quite make it to the rotor wing."
"I have experience in all types of drafting - illustrations, mechanical,
geophysical, geological, some architectural, very little electrical, some with
civil. I have worked for companies involved in off-shore drilling, where I did a
lot of the seismic maps, labeling, and seismic readings. Later, I went to work
for a man named Bob Truax, on a back yard program to put a person into space. It
was called Project Private Enterprise. This turned into a very good experience.
He was good to let me just go out into the shop and play, and to answer my silly
questions."
"Bob tried to keep me in the office with aeronautical drafting, but I
kept drifting off into the shop, and ended up doing office work as well, so!
became the person who was doing a little bit of everything. If something needed
to be done I usually got volunteered. It was a wonderful friendship with him and
all the people who were there-a very good all-around work experience. I learned
a lot of good basics that served me for the Voyager program.
"Time and circumstances got me into flying experimental aircraft. I met
Dick Rutan in 1980, and we started friendly competition flying and setting
records. I hold five world records (in speed and distance), and Dick has six
world records. Then we went on to the Voyager, which seemed a nice evolution to
the next records."
"Once Dick and I had decided to do the Voyager, we more or less rolled
up our sleeves, and not knowing a lot about anything, set up a corporation..
.learning how to operate a corporation, putting together an airplane without
plans, making it up as we went, figuring out how to raise funds, how to make
things happen. Everything was a learning step."
"The Voyager project was a six-year program. Then came the
around-the-world flight on December 1986. Dick and! more than doubled the world
record when we flew non-stop and non-refueled around the world-the first time
ever that it was done. The farthest anyone had ever traveled was only halfway
around the world."
"It was exciting watching it all come together, exploring your own self
and finding out, 'yeah, I can do this; I'm capable.' It was a fun discovery
period."
"All experiences of your life are training and developing for your next
level of expertise. I would say that Voyager is a training situation for my next
level. I have no idea what the next level is going to be, but! know I'll be
capable of whatever I decide to do."
"The Voyager was one of those rare opportunities that hardly ever come
along in any body's lifetime. When you have that opportunity, it's hard to say
no. I certainly couldn't. There are very few things that are that unique and
that different. It was something I had to be a part of"
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