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Tuesday Afternoon

(56,912 posts)
Tue Mar 25, 2014, 12:38 PM Mar 2014

March 25, 1942: officially confirmed that 25 of America's best women pilots will be going to Britain

to help with the Allied war effort.

After learning that our Army Air Forces had no immediate plans to use women, Jacqueline Cochran began recruiting women pilots about six weeks ago for duty in the British Air Transport Auxiliary. According to Commodore H.R. Thornton, the women will ferry light aircraft from factories to airfields after first going to Canada for physical examinations, training and flight tests.

Though Americans are quite supportive of our British allies, today's move is controversial because experienced pilots will be needed here to train new pilots for our own rapidly expanding war effort. But a number of qualified women pilots will remain in the U.S. in order to do training if called on to do so. In America, women pilots can currently serve only in the Civil Air Patrol and as instructors.

Cochran learned to fly in three weeks, earned her pilot's license in 1932, and has been flying competitively since 1934. In 1938 she outflew her male competitors to win the prestigious Bendix Transcontinental Air Race - and she did so under atrocious weather conditions. On September 28, 1940, just over a year after the war began in Europe, she wrote First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt suggesting the establishment of a women's flying division of what was then the Army Air Corps. Last June she proved that women could perform useful tasks in military aviation by becoming the first woman to fly a bomber across the Atlantic.


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March 25, 1942: officially confirmed that 25 of America's best women pilots will be going to Britain (Original Post) Tuesday Afternoon Mar 2014 OP
Another excellent piece of history ismnotwasm Mar 2014 #1
I love posting about the History of Feminism ... Tuesday Afternoon Mar 2014 #3
Female ferry pilots were vital in getting aircraft from US/Canada to Europe malthaussen Mar 2014 #2
That is a disgrace. Sad. Tuesday Afternoon Mar 2014 #4

malthaussen

(17,215 posts)
2. Female ferry pilots were vital in getting aircraft from US/Canada to Europe
Tue Mar 25, 2014, 01:19 PM
Mar 2014

"Thirty-eight WASP fliers lost their lives while serving during the war –- all in accidents—eleven in training and twenty-seven on active duty. Because they were not considered military under the existing guidelines, a fallen WASP was sent home at family expense without traditional military honors or note of heroism. The army would not even allow the U.S. flag to be placed on the coffin of the fallen WASP" (from a Wikipedia article)

-- Mal

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