Marion Weyant Ruth

Marion Weyant "Babe" Ruth (February 7, 1918 – November 20, 2004) was an American aviator and aviation instructor. She was inducted into the Michigan Aviation Hall of Fame, the Michigan Motor Sports Hall of Fame, and the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame during her lifetime.

Early life

Marion Jane Weyant was born in Lansing, Michigan, the daughter of Lloyd Jennings Weyant and Marie Weyant. She was fascinated with airplanes from a young age, and received an encouraging letter from Amelia Earhart in 1933. She and her mother built a stand to sell sodas near Lansing's Capital City Airport, to raise money for lessons.[1] Soon after, she started flying lessons. At age 19, she had earned her private pilot's license, becoming the youngest licensed pilot in the United States, male or female, in 1937. In 1941 she qualified for a commercial pilot's license.[2]

Career

Weyant was busy doing exhibition flying in the 1930s, and for her performances in the Michigan Air Tour[3] in 1937 and 1938, she won the Joyce Hartung trophy in 1940. In 1942, she began to teach aspiring Air Force and airline pilots using the Link Aviation Simulator. She is considered one of the first female flight instructors in the United States. In the 1970s, she taught in the aviation department at Lansing Community College in Michigan. In 1976, she competed in the All Women's International Air Race. By 1986, she had logged over 10,000 hours in the air. In her later years, Weyant taught pilot safety seminars, and worked to preserve and record Michigan aviation history.[4]

Ruth won the "Piper Award" in 1964, as the woman who had logged the most flying hours that year in the International Flying Farmers organization.[5] In 1980, Ruth was recognized with the Pioneer Woman Pilot Award by the OX5 Club of America;[6] in 1988, she was inducted into the Michigan Aviation Hall of Fame,[7] and in 1992 she was inducted into the Michigan Motor Sports Hall of Fame.[8] In 2002, the Ninety-Nines recognized her with a lifetime achievement award. In 2003, she was inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame.[2]

In 2003, Ruth's memoir, Airport Kid: Learning to Fly was published by Michigan Historical Press.[9]

Personal life

Marion Weyant was active in Zonta International[10] and other women's organizations. She married Dale Charles Ruth in 1947. They had two daughters.[11] She was widowed in 2000, and died in 2004, age 86.

A flag that belonged to Ruth was recently part of the "Lansing Goes to War" exhibit at the Lansing Historical Society.[12] February 7, 2005 was declared "Marion 'Babe' Ruth Day" in Ingham County, Michigan, by resolution of the county's Board of Commissioners.[13]

gollark: I mean, in the absence of any idiomatic-Lua-y solution, it seems best, and I'd prefer to not downgrade Skynet to JSON.
gollark: Why is it that bad?
gollark: <@237328509234708481> Thoughts?
gollark: (though since lua loves its strings-as-byte-arrays that wouldn't be great)
gollark: I mean, you could allow use of arrays of bytes (well, tables) if it's that awful.

References

  1. Jon Harrison, "October 26, 1936: Marion 'Babe' Weyant of Lansing Solos as Airplane Pilot for First Time" MSU Libraries blog (October 26, 2015).
  2. Marion Weyant Ruth, Michigan Women's Hall of Fame inductee, 2003.
  3. "Out State" Ironwood Daily Globe (July 27, 1937): 8. via Newspapers.com
  4. Marion "Babe" Weyant Ruth, Air Zoo, Kalamazoo MI.
  5. "Flying Farmerette Gets Piper Award" The Express (August 22, 1964): 8. via Newspapers.com
  6. OX5 Club of America, Membership Roster (2004): 15.
  7. "Aviator Flies Into Hall of Fame Today".
  8. "Marion 'Babe' Ruth" Michigan Motor Sports Hall of Fame inductee, 1992.
  9. Marion Weyant Ruth and Craig A. Whitford, Airport Kid: Learning to Fly (Michigan Historical Press 2003). ISBN 9780974668505
  10. Zonta International, District 15, Former Officials.
  11. The Ninety-Nines: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow (Turner Publishing 1996): 192. ISBN 9781563112034
  12. Vickki Dozier, "Exhibit Tells the Story of Lansing in Wartime" Lansing State Journal (March 4, 2015).
  13. Ingham County Board of Commissioners, Resolution #05-011 (January 25, 2005).
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