Whirly-Girls

The Whirly-Girls, officially known as Whirly-Girls International, are a non-profit, charitable and educational organization that aims to advance women in helicopter aviation. They are an affiliate member of the Helicopter Association International.[1] The Whirly-Girls and the Ninety-Nines have many members in common.[2]

Whirly-Girls International
Founded1955
TypeTrade Association
FocusDedicated to advancing women in helicopter aviation
Location
  • Palm Harbor, FL, U.S.
Members
1,700
Websitehttp://www.whirlygirls.org/

History

The Whirly-Girls were founded by Jean Ross Howard Phelan, an American helicopter pilot, in 1955. At the time there were so few women with helicopter ratings that the group started with only 13 charter members representing the United States, Germany, and France.[2] The Whirly-Girls provided a community for female helicopter pilots to share interests, remove feelings of isolation, and to come together in annual "Hoverings" beginning in April 1955.[3] Today the organization has over 1,700 members from 44 different countries.[1]The first member ("Whirly-Girl #1") was Hanna Reitsch, who flew her helicopter inside Berlin's Deutschlandhalle in 1938.[2] Charter member #10 was aviator Edna Gardner Whyte.[4]

The organization's logo was inspired by a recruiting show put on by the U.S. Army in the early 1950s. Four helicopters performed a square dance, with a caller on the microphone and a band playing "Turkey in the Straw". Two of the helicopters were decorated to represent the boys, and the other two represented the girls. The "girl" helicopters were topped with blonde wigs fashioned from dyed floor mops, and faces were painted on them in the style of Betty Boop.[1]

The scholarship program was started in 1968 in memory of Doris Mullen, a former member. It was incorporated in 1974, and became an international program in 1978. The program provides flight training scholarships to eligible women.[5]

Phelan received the National Aeronautic Association's Elder Statesman of Aviation Award in 1994.[2]

gollark: If my experience and random blog posts are anything to go by, consumer routers mostly run horrible hodgepodges of various poorly secured C programs duct-taped together and then exposed to the internet and quite possibly never updated.
gollark: I had one with a telnet interface on which you could get root access by doing `ps ; sh`.
gollark: > there's no way anyone got through my randomly generated 32-character root passwordThis is irrelevant. Routers have awful security.
gollark: We have over 110 bots and an uncountably infinite number of apioforms.
gollark: Bot count is increasingly rapidly. None are safe. [BEES EXPUNGED].

References

  1. "Whirly-Girls International Digital Archive". Texas Women's University.
  2. The Ninety-Nines: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow. Turner Publishing Company. 1996. pp. 25, 39. ISBN 9781563112034.
  3. Weitekamp, Margaret A., 1971- (2004). Right stuff, wrong sex : America's first women in space program. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 55–56. ISBN 0-8018-7994-9. OCLC 55124275.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Buffington, H. Glenn. "Edna Gardner Whyte". The Vintage Airplane. October 1973, pp. 12–14, 16.
  5. "Whirly-Girl Scholarships". Whirly-Girls International.

Further reading

  • Holden, Henry M. (2012). Hovering: The History of the Whirly-Girls - International Helicopter Pilots. Black Hawk Publishing.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.