Flying With America's Most Famous Female Aviators

Dozens of talented women preceded Amelia Earhart, and thousands have followed, and each has her own groundbreaking story to tell

  • By Patricia Trenner
  • Smithsonian.com, October 22, 2009
| 7 of 13 |

Willa Brown

(National Air and Space Museum)


Willa Brown (1906-1992)

Brown was the first African-American woman to earn a commercial flight license in the United States in 1937. She was a founding member of the National Airmen Association, which lobbied for the inclusion of black pilots in the U.S. Army Air Corps, and as a flight instructor she trained more than 200 students who eventually became Tuskegee Airmen, the all-black aerial combat unit that flew with distinction in World War II.

| 7 of 13 |





 

Add New Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Comments (31)

+ View All Comments

this was really helpfull but i could not find bessie coleman

Well....she won't do that again........

Why Katherine Sui Fun Cheung is not included in this report! She was America's First Chinese-American pilot. She was also part of the 99er club.

She was well known for her jumpsuit which was colored purple.

I have been doing research on Mary riddle on and off for nearly a year. I will speak with anyone who would like to discuss this wonderful and fascinating lady. I will be doing a story about her in our next newsletter. contact me at the Aberdeen Museum of History (360) 533-1976

although i am only young, this site has given me valid information and i don't know anybody however i am truly inspired by all of this

I'm proud to say Mary Riddle came from Tribe. Would like to get in contact with David Kaufman and anyone else that knew Mary. My e-mail is jeremy2feathers@yahoo.com. Thanks

I knew Mary Riddle and be happy to talk to anybody. I worked in the same company as Mary, Gibbs & Hill.

mary riddle was the first native amrican women to be an aviator

I think it was fasinating you flew the famouse 99er.

I knew June Reynolds Edwards in the 1960s. At the time she was a television personality on Channel 17 in Bakersfield, California where her husband, Wayne, was working as a crop duster.
June told me how at one time she had as many hours in the air as Amelia Earhart, had been a president of the Ninety-Nines and one of the first women crop dusters. One of her jobs was flying a crop duster to Cuba in the pre-Castro days and teaching men there to crop dust.
She suddenly left Bakersfield around 1968 and I have not located her since. Why is she not listed on any website or in any aviation books on women pilots if this info is true?
Anyone out there know anything?
Thanks for info.

Why is there no photograff of Beryl Markham?? She was an incredible aviator and writer as well.

Harriet Quimby has a book written about her. It's called Wings. I have always wondered if that book was based off true events, now I know. I encourage anyone who loves aviation to read it. It is a romance/adventure book, and is very informative in an interesting way. It's not like reading a biography.

The photo labled Betty Skelton is definately not Betty. That photo would have been taken pre-WWI according to the pilot dress. Betty was not even alive during that time. She did not come into fame until AFTER WWII.



Advertisement



Harriet Quimby Katherine and Marjorie Stinson Bessie Coleman Amelia Earhart Pancho Barnes Jacqueline Cochran Willa Brown Elinor Smith Mary Riddle Jacqueline Auriol Betty Skelton Patty Wagstaff


Follow Us

Advertisement