Barbara Jane Harrison
Barbara Jane Harrison GC (24 May 1945 – 8 April 1968), known as Jane Harrison,[1] was a British flight attendant, one of four women to have been awarded the George Cross for heroism[2] and the only woman awarded the medal for gallantry in peacetime (the other three female George Cross recipients served with the Special Operations Executive in occupied France during the Second World War).
Barbara Jane Harrison | |
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Barbara Jane Harrison, GC | |
Born | Barbara Jane Harrison 24 May 1945 Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire, England |
Died | 8 April 1968 22) London Heathrow Airport | (aged
Cause of death | Fire |
Resting place | Fulford Cemetery, York |
Nationality | British |
Other names | Jane Harrison |
Occupation | Flight attendant |
Employer | British Overseas Airways Corporation |
Known for | BOAC Flight 712 |
Parent(s) | Alan Harrison, Lena Harrison (née Adlard) |
Awards | George Cross (posthumous) |
Early life
Harrison was born on 24 May 1945 at the family home in Kingsdale Crescent, Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire to Lena and Alan Harrison. She was their second child, another daughter, Susan Elizabeth, having been born in 1941. Harrison attended Greystones School, Bradford. The family later moved to Scarborough, where Harrison attended Newby County Primary School. In 1955 her mother died. She passed her 11-plus and attended Scarborough Girls' High School. In 1961, her father moved to Doncaster. Harrison stayed on at Scarborough to complete her O levels before joining her father in the summer of 1961. She then attended Doncaster High School until Easter, 1962.[A]:ch1
Career
After leaving school, Harrison worked at Martins Bank from 1962 until 1964, then took a job as a nanny for a Swiss farmer in the Canton of Neuchâtel in order to improve her French. She later took another job as a nanny in San Francisco. While in San Francisco she applied for a job as a flight attendant with British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), and she joined BOAC in May 1966.
After completing her training, Harrison was assigned work onboard BOAC's Boeing 707 fleet. She moved to Emperor's Gate, Kensington, London, where she shared a flat with other BOAC flight attendants, and purchased a Ford Anglia car for use in getting to work at Heathrow Airport. She also joined Universal Aunts, which provided staff to do odd jobs; one of her assignments was babysitting Jason Connery, son of actor Sean Connery.[A]:ch3 While she enjoyed her job, long-haul flights with their several stopovers were exhausting, and she had told a friend she was considering quitting BOAC.[A]:29
On 8 April 1968 Harrison was rostered at her own request to work BOAC Flight 712 Whiskey Echo long-haul to Sydney, Australia, via Zurich, Tel Aviv, Tehran, Bombay (now Mumbai), Singapore and Perth. She told a colleague that she had been invited to a wedding in Sydney, but it is possible that she wanted to see a Qantas pilot she had met some months before.[A]:26,29-30
Death at her post
Harrison, aged 22, was a flight attendant on board BOAC Flight 712 when it left Heathrow Airport at 16.27 BST on 8 April 1968, bound indirectly for Sydney. The citation for Harrison's George Cross recites what happened almost immediately after takeoff:
No. 2 engine of B.O.A.C. Boeing 707 G-ARWE caught fire and subsequently fell from the aircraft, leaving a fierce fire burning at No. 2 engine position. About two and a half minutes later the aircraft made an emergency landing at the airport and the fire on the port wing intensified. Miss Harrison was one of the stewardesses in this aircraft and the duties assigned to her in an emergency were to help the steward at the aft station to open the appropriate rear door and inflate the escape chute and then to assist the passengers at the rear of the aircraft to leave in an orderly manner. When the aircraft landed, Miss Harrison and the steward concerned opened the rear galley door and inflated the chute, which unfortunately became twisted on the way down so that the steward had to climb down it to straighten it before it could be used. Once out of the aircraft he was unable to return; hence Miss Harrison was left alone to the task of shepherding passengers to the rear door and helping them out of the aircraft. She encouraged some passengers to jump from the machine and pushed out others. With flames and explosions all around her, making an escape from the tail of the machine impossible, she directed her passengers to another exit while she remained at her post.[4]
According to witnesses, after the escape chute had been burnt away Harrison continued to force passengers to safety by pushing them out the door, even as "flames and smoke [were] licking around her face".[A]:72–74,136 She then seemed to be preparing to jump but instead turned back inside;[A]:76,77 there was another explosion and she was not seen alive again.[A]:131 Her body was found with four others near the rear door;[A]:91 all had died from asphyxia.[A]:151
Anthony Crosland (President of the Board of Trade and the minister responsible for civil aviation) later wrote of Harrison's "lonely and courageous action" and "devotion to duty, in the highest traditions of her calling".[A]:139
In August 1969 Harrison became the only woman to receive the George Cross in peacetime,[5][4] and its youngest female recipient.[6][7] It is now at British Airways' Speedbird Centre, which is dedicated to the history of the crew and story of British Airways.
Memorials
The "Barbara Jane Harrison, GC, Memorial Fund", set up in October 1969, raised £1,500 towards purchase of a computer for the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, for use by the muscular dystrophy laboratories for research into the disease.[A]:ch11
A plaque in memory of Harrison was unveiled on 23 October 1970.[A]:App2 The Barbara Harrison Prize was established in 1968 by the Royal Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine. It is awarded to the best student on a Diploma in Aviation Medicine course whose first language is not English. The prize is now under the remit of the Department of Aviation Medicine at King's College, London. Since 2010, the Barbara Harrison Memorial Prize is awarded to the student of the Diploma in Aviation Medicine Course "who has demonstrated commitment to others and determination to succeed through the course and in gaining the Diploma".
Also in 1970, a plaque memorial was unveiled in St. George's Interdenominational Chapel in Heathrow Airport dedicated to Harrison. A plaque remembering Harrison is on the churchyard wall of St Laurence's Church, Scalby, Scarborough. She is also commemorated with a memorial display in Bradford City Hall.[8]
See also
Sources and further reading
A. | Susan Ottaway, Fire Over Heathrow. The Tragedy of Flight 712. |
B. | O'Brien, Tim (June 2008). "The Last Flight of Whiskey Echo". Aeroplane. 36, Number 6 (422): 30–35. ISSN 0143-7240. |
References
- Michael Ashcroft, George Cross Heroes, 2010
- Other women have received awards that were later replaced by the GC for actions in peacetime
- "A Memorial to Honour the Bravest". The Friends of the Green Howards. Archived from the original on 31 October 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
- "No. 44913". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 August 1969. p. 8211.
- "Barbara Jane Harrison, GC (Posthumously)". Chameleon HH Publishing Ltd. Archived from the original on 13 October 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
- "George Cross (GC) Database – Highest civilian gallantry award". www.gc-database.co.uk. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
- Kennedy, Poppy (5 April 2018). "An ordinary woman whose bravery saved the lives of over 100 people". The Scarborough News. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
- Kilner, Will (27 May 2010). "Bradford air stewardess included in national biography". Bradford Telegraph and Argus. Retrieved 3 June 2014.