Faith Bennett

Faith Margaret Ellen Bennett (1903–1969) was a British actress and ATA pilot.[1][2]

Faith Bennett
Bennett signing to collect a spitfire
Born(1903-05-12)12 May 1903
Died1969 (aged 65 or 66)
London, United Kingdom
Other namesMargaret Ellen Riddick
OccupationActress, ATA Pilot
Years active1931-1939 (film & TV) 1941-1945 (ATA Pilot)

Biography

Bennett was born Margaret Ellen Riddick[3] on 12 May 1903 in London, England.[1] One of her brothers died during the First World War.[1][3]

In 1930, she married film writer Charles Alfred Selwyn Bennett, and over the course of the 1930s she starred in multiple British films under the stage name Faith Bennett.[1] Bennett took flying lessons alongside her acting career, earning both a British aviator's certificate and an American flying license (the couple moved to the U.S. briefly while Charles worked for Universal Studios).[1]

In July 1941, after divorcing Charles, Bennett joined the ATA.[1] She received her training and was assigned to No. 5 Ferry Pilot Pool (F.P.P.) in December that year, and only two days later was forced to make a crash landing due to poor weather and a stalled engine.[1] Bennett sustained "slight injuries", and was afterwards assigned to the Training Ferry Pool.[1] She remained with the ATA until July 1945.[1]

Bennett married fellow ATA pilot Herbert Henry Newmark in 1946.[1][3]

Bennett died in 1969.[1][3]

The British Women Pilots' Association named the Faith Bennett Navigation Cup after her, and the trophy is still awarded annually to women pilots of special merit.[1][4]

Filmography

gollark: And I have about the same number of neurons as a really big GPU has transistors, I think, but those aren't that comparable.
gollark: I can manage probably 0.01 FLOPS given a bit of paper to work on, while my phone's GPU can probably do a few tens of GFLOPS, but emulating my brain would likely need EFLOPS of processing power and exabytes of memory.
gollark: Depending on how you count it my brain is much more powerful, or much less, than a lemon-powered portable electronic device.
gollark: Of course, it's possible that this is the wrong way to think about it, given that my brain is probably doing much more computation than a tablet powered by 5000 lemons thanks to a really optimized (for its specific task) architecture, and some hypothetical ultratech computer could probably do better.
gollark: I mean, it uses maybe 10W as far as I know (that's the right order of magnitude) so about as much as a tablet charger or 5000 lemons.

References

  1. "Aircraft accidents in Yorkshire". www.yorkshire-aircraft.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-10-20.
  2. Brown p.50
  3. "W45 - Faith Bennett". afleetingpeace.org. Archived from the original on 2017-10-21. Retrieved 2017-10-20.
  4. "Awards | British Women Pilots' Association". bwpa.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2017-10-21. Retrieved 2017-10-20.

Bibliography

  • Brown, Geoff. Launder and Gilliat. British Film Institute, 1977.
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