POINT OF VIEW
Just For The Fun Of It...
The event which started concerted activity among women fliers
was the cross country air derby for women of 1929. This was
a race which started on the West Coast and ended eight days
later at Cleveland, Ohio.
Sunday afternoon August 18, nineteen planes with propellers
turning, lined up at Clover Field, Santa Monica, California.
Will Rogers was on the loud speaker to point out the humorous
aspects of such an event. Taking their cue from him, newspaper
men coined descriptive names for the affair before contestants
reached their first stop. It was generally called the "powder
puff derby" and those who flew in it variously as "Ladybirds",
"Angels" or "Sweethearts of the Air". (We
are still trying to get ourselves called just "pilots".)
Finishing a race, as in anything else, is as important as starting,
and sixteen of the women crossed the white line at the end.
This was the highest per cent of "finishers" in any
cross country derby, up to that time, for men or women.
This first air derby was won by Louise Thaden of Pittsburgh,
with Gladys O'Donnell of California, second and me third. It
captured the public interest and proved invaluable in interesting
other women in aviation. A large part of the crowds to which
greeted the derby at the prearranged stops along the route were
women. They came to see what the powder puffers themselves looked
like and after that what kind of airplanes they had. Some were
so interested in these they poked umbrellas through the fabric
on the wings to discover what was inside. Since then I have
maintained that women's hesitancy in accepting air travel is
simply because they are uninformed about it. What people don't
understand, they usually fear.
Funny and serious situations continuously arose behind the scenes
on the race. Blanche Noyes discovered fire in the baggage compartment
of her plane and had to come down on a mesquite covered section
of western Texas to put it out. No one knows how she managed
to land without damaging the plane nor how she took off again
from such a place.
Now and then some of the inexperienced pilots got lost, some
ran out of gasoline, some were forced down by motor trouble.
During the course of the race, more than one had to pick out
the best spot available and make an unscheduled descent. Of
course, when a pilot finds it necessary to land away from an
established airport he - or she - heads for a good big pasture
if one is around. One day one of the girls had to seek a pasture
for some reason and the best one she saw had animals in it.
Nevertheless she landed safely and then to her consternation
watched the creatures solemnly walk toward her. Her version
of the story is that she promptly offered up a little prayer.
It was "Dear God, let them all be cows."
Speaking of cows, I am reminded of one of the most famous of
air mail stories. Dean Smith flew the route from New York to
Cleveland for a good many years. On one occasion, when his motor
failed him, he too sought a pasture for a landing. Unfortunately,
the "animals" in it were not well behaved for they
stood in his way and he landed directly on one. The following
is in substance the account of the accident which he telegraphed
to his chief --
"Motor cut. Forced landing. Hit cow. Cow died. Scared me."
To return to the derby, it is but fair to give credit where
it is due. The race was arranged and its prizes financed by
the National Exchange Clubs, an organization which I believe
has done more to aid aviation than any other non-professional
group in America. It is interesting to compare the status of
women flying in 1929 with their position today. To be eligible
for the 1929 derby, a current license and a minimum of one hundred
hours' solo flying were required. I doubt whether more than
thirty American women could have qualified. But of this possible
thirty, twenty turned out. In 1929, only seven women held Department
of Commerce Transport licenses and six of these were in the
race. Today, as I have said before, there are more than seven
times this number. In addition to these and the 450 LC's and
Privates, twelve women hold glider licenses and five are licensed
mechanics.
Although only two years separates them, it is a far cry from
the pioneering derby performance to women's share in the National
Air Races in Cleveland in 1931. There for the first time in
the United States men and women participated in a cross country
derby together. There were about fifty entrants whose planes
had been handicapped on the basis of their top speeds.
Unlike the British, the Americans have done little mixed racing,
nor have they favored any system of handicapping. The method
of determining classes has been almost universally based on
size of motors. Thus, a cabin airplane built to carry six passengers
might be placed in the same class with a strictly racing plane
carrying only the pilot because both had engines with the same
cubic inch displacement.
In England, on the other hand, almost all racing has been carried
on with the fast planes starting late to give the slower ones
a chance motors not being considered. So that, barring an accident
good piloting wins or loses. The King's Cup Race, the most famous
annual cross country event, is run this manner, and is open
to all pilots of both sexes. Miss Winifred Brown is the only
woman who has won it (1930).
Excerpted from The Fun of It, Random Records of My Own Flying
and of Women in Aviation written by Amelia Earhart and published
in 1932.