Beatrix de Rijk

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Born24 July 1883
Died18 January 1958
OthernamesBéatrice Deryck
OccupationPilot
Beatrix de Rijk
Born24 July 1883
Died18 January 1958
Other namesBéatrice Deryck
OccupationPilot

Beatrix de Rijk (1883–1958) was a pioneering Indonesian Dutch aviator. On receiving her pilot's licence from the Aéro-Club de France on 6 October 1911, she became the first Dutch woman pilot.[1][2]

Born on 24 July 1883 in Surabaya in the Dutch East Indies[3] Beatrix de Rijk was the daughter of Henriëtte Josephina van den Dungen (1850-1919), who was Javanese, and Dutch banker Augustinus Wilhelm de Rijk (1838-1905).[3] Her family were rich, amongst other business ventures they owned the Klampok sugar factory at Banjumas in Central Java. Beatrix grew up with a passion for speed and danger, and was an excellent horsewoman, taking her horses with her on her travels through what was then called the Dutch East Indies.[3]

On 3 April 1902, she married Herman Christiaan Johan Smeets (b. 1871), a first lieutenant with the Koninklijk Nederlands-Indische Leger, with whom she had a son, Jan, in 1903. de Rijk divorced Smeets in February 1905 and her father died six months later, so de Rijk and her mother moved to the Netherlands. Her son is thought to have remained with his father.[3]

In the Netherlands she was the first Dutch woman to drive an Adler, but she found the car was too slow for her, so she bought an NSU-motorbike. Her mother Henriëtte did not approve of her daughter's youthful impetuosity, so de Rijk left for Paris with her inheritance.[2]

In Paris, de Rijk started working as a mannequin for the House of Worth.[1] She also took part in a variety of activities including riding, tennis, driving, horse races at Auteuil and hot air ballooning, joining Madame Marie Surcouf Bayard's ladies' balloon club 'la Stella', founded in 1909, but this soon began to bore her. She wanted to learn to fly aeroplanes.[3]

Flying career

Later life and commemoration

References

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