Jean Bird

Jean Bird (8 July 1912 – 29 April 1957) was a pioneering pilot and the first woman to be awarded RAF wings.

Jean Bird
Pilot licence photo
Born
Jean Lennox Bird

8 July 1912
Hong Kong
Died29 April 1957
Manchester
Known forPioneering pilot

Early life

Jean Lennox Bird was born in Hong Kong on 8 July 1912, the second daughter of Lt Col. Lennox Godfrey Bird, an architect who designed several buildings in Hong Kong and Shanghai. Her father retired in 1935, and the family returned home, eventually settling at the Old Farm, in Beech, near Alton, Hampshire England.

Bird started flying at the age of eighteen and took lessons, alongside her father, at the Hampshire Aeroplane Club in Hamble, during a visit home. Both qualified on 2 October 1930.

War-service

By the time Second World War broke out in 1939 Bird was an experienced pilot. She was commissioned into the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) as Assistant Section Officer (ASO) in 1940 and remained there for a year until invited to join the ATA.

Bird joined the Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA) on 1 August 1941 and soon qualified as a First Officer. The aircraft she ferried included: Hurricanes, Spitfires, Wellingtons, Beaufighters, Mosquitos and Dakotas. She served with the ATA until the organisation closed down at the end of the war, on 30 November 1945.[1][2][3]

Post-war

In 1946, Bird piloted a single-engine air taxi from Durban, South Africa to Britain to help a young bride attend her wedding in Croydon.[4]

In September 1949 Bird was commissioned into the Women's RAF Volunteer Reserve (WRAFVR), as a Pilot Officer, as were a number of the ATA women pilots. During their 5-year commissions, several women took up the opportunity to become fully qualified RAF pilots and Bird duly became the first woman ever to wear the brevet of an RAF Pilot: the 'Wings'. She was awarded her wings, amid some publicity, at Redhill Aerodrome on 20 September 1952.[5][6][2][7][8] By the time she qualified, Bird had 3,000 hours in more than 90 different types of aircraft.

The next target was to gain membership of the all-male RAF Club in Piccadilly. Pilot Officer Bird's application was apparently successful, but membership was rejected when this officer's gender was discovered.[7][9]

When the force was re-established during the Cold War, Bird then became a member, from December 1955, of the 3rd Hants (Alton) Battalion of the Home Guard, one of 16 women to do so. She also worked with the Women’s Junior Air Corps, training young women to fly, and was also a glider pilot.[7][3][10]

The Meridian Air Maps Miles Aerovan

Bird's main occupation in the 1950s was in the developing field of photographic aerial survey, working for Meridian Air Maps. On 29 April 1957, she was surveying the proposed route of a new road, when her 'Aerovan' twin-engined freight plane crashed and she was killed.[11] The coroner's verdict was accidental death, although evidence was given that the aircraft had been fitted with an incorrect spare part.

Bird is commemorated by the Jean Lennox Bird Trophy of the British Women Pilots’ Association.[12] This Chinese antique, a carving in jade to recall her early flying-days in Hong Kong, is awarded annually to a British woman pilot who has also made a noteworthy contribution to aviation.[2][7][3][13][14][15]

First five

Jean Bird, Benedetta Willis, Jackie Moggridge, Freydis Leaf and Joan Hughes were the first five women to be awarded their wings.[16] The next to gain wings was Julie Ann Gibson in 1991.[17][18]

gollark: Just turn it on.
gollark: My powers are unlimited.
gollark: My room cactus died to lack of water once.
gollark: Journalling on paper seems quite bee.
gollark: Anyway, I don't think you'll *die*, just inevitably fall asleep.

References

  1. Alton Herald 2018.
  2. BWPA 2017.
  3. Defence 2017.
  4. Anne Grant, "Women Pilots of the Solent", SolentAviatrix
  5. Ferguson 2017, p. 34.
  6. British Pathe 1952.
  7. Alton Herald 2018.
  8. The RAF 100 Schools Project 2017.
  9. Doughan & Gordon 2007, p. 36.
  10. The National Archives 2008.
  11. "Death of First W.R.A.F. Pilot". The Woman Engineer. 8: 23. Summer 1957 via IET.
  12. "British Women Pilots' Association". The Woman Engineer. 8: 19. Spring 1959 via IET.
  13. Goldman 2013, p. 1151.
  14. Brown 2017, p. 33.
  15. Walker 2008, p. 379.
  16. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MEeNqq48_E
  17. Patrick Sawer; Helena Horton (8 July 2018). "Women RAF pilots 'forgotten' in centenary celebrations, say relatives".
  18. "Celebrating 100 years of British women pilots". British Women Pilot's Association. 17 July 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2017.

Sources


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.