List of women aviators

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of women aviators — women prominent in the field of aviation as constructors, designers, pilots and patrons.

Aida de Acosta flying the airship Baladeuse in 1903 – the first woman to pilot a powered aircraft

It also includes a list of their relevant organisations such as the Betsy Ross Air Corps and Women's Royal Air Force.

Individuals

A

  • Amen Aamir, first women from Gilgit-Baltistan to qualify as a pilot
  • Asli Hassan Abade, First African female fighter jet pilot. A prominent Somali Air Force pilot, military figure, and civil activist.
  • Aida de Acosta (1884–1962), first woman to fly a powered aircraft alone[1]
  • Margaret Adams, Australian aviator; first president of the Australian Women's Flying Club, in 1938
  • Zoya Agarwal, world's youngest woman pilot to fly the Boeing 777 (2013), captained world's longest flight route over North Pole (2021)
  • Leman Altınçekiç (1932–2001), first female accredited jet pilot (1958) in Turkey and NATO.
  • Gaby Angelini (1911–1932), first Italian woman to complete a trans-European flight
  • Princess Anne of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg (1864–1927), second woman to attempt a flight across the Atlantic. Her plane never arrived, with she and her crew presumed dead.
  • Kimberly Anyadike (born 1994), youngest African-American female pilot to complete a transcontinental flight
  • Cecilia Aragon (born 1960), first Latina pilot on the United States Aerobatic Team[2]
  • Tamar Ariel (1989–2014), Israel's first Jewish female religiously observant air force pilot, in 2012
  • Jacqueline Auriol (1917–2000), French test pilot who rivalled Jacqueline Cochran in breaking speed records[3]
  • Micky Axton (1919–2010), one of the first three Women Air Force Service Pilots (WASPs) to be trained as a test pilot; first woman to fly a B-29
Lilian Bland flying the Mayfly in 1911. She built the aircraft herself to become the first woman to fly in Ireland.

B

Willa Brown, the first African-American woman to receive a commission as a lieutenant in the U.S. Civil Air Patrol
  • Mary, Lady Bailey (1890-1960), Anglo-Irish aviator who flew from Croydon to Cape Town and back again, at the same time that her friend, Mary, Lady Heath, was making her one-way flight from Cape Town to Croydon.
  • Pancho Barnes (1901–1975), granddaughter of balloonist Thaddeus Lowe; founded the Women's Air Reserve, Associated Motion Picture Pilots and became the "mother of the Air Force"[4][5]
  • Mary Barr (1925–2010), first female pilot to join the US Forest Service and become National Aviation Safety Officer[6]
  • Jean Batten (1909–1982), made first solo flight from United Kingdom to New Zealand in the 1930s
  • Ann Baumgartner (1918–2008), test pilot; first American woman to fly a U.S. Army Air Forces jet aircraft (a Bell YP-59A jet fighter)
  • Amelie Beese (1886–1925), first woman pilot in Germany[7]
  • Elly Beinhorn (1907–2007), German enthusiast who made long-distance flights on every continent and flew around the world[8]
  • Velta Benn (1917–2010), American pilot, first woman to land a military jet on a Navy aircraft carrier[9]
  • Dagny Berger (1903–1950), Norway's first woman aviator
  • Susana Ferrari Billinghurst (1914–1999), Argentinian pilot; first woman in South America to gain a commercial pilot's license, in 1937
  • Lilian Bland (1878–1971), built her own aircraft; first woman to fly in Ireland[10]
  • Line Bonde (born c.1979), first Danish woman to become a fighter pilot, in 2006
  • Maude Bonney (1897–1994), Australian aviator who was the first female to fly from England to Australia in 1933 and to South Africa in 1937.
  • Ana Branger (born early 1920s), early Venezuelan aviator
  • Jill E. Brown (born 1950), first African American female pilot for a major US carrier
  • Willa Brown (1906–1992), first black woman to hold both a commercial and private license in the US; founded the National Negro Airmen Association of America; first black female to be an officer in the Civil Air Patrol[11]
  • Mrs Victor Bruce (1895–1990), born Mildred Mary but most famous by her married name; first woman to fly around the world alone and the first to be prosecuted for speeding[12][13]
  • Millicent Bryant (1878–1927), first woman to earn a pilot's license in Australia
  • Beverly Burns (born 1949), American pilot, possibly the first woman to captain a jumbo jet (see Lynn Rippelmeyer)[14]

C

Bessie Coleman in 1922
Amelia Earhart standing under nose of her Lockheed Model 10-E Electra

D

E

  • Amelia Earhart (1897–1937), first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic[29]
  • Amelia Rose Earhart (born 1983), reporter and pilot
  • Ruth Elder (1902–1977), pilot and actress known as the "Miss America of Aviation"[30]
  • Mary Ellis (1917–2018), one of the last surviving British women pilots from World War II
  • Lotfia Elnadi (1907–2002), the first African woman, first Arab woman, and first Egyptian woman to earn her pilot’s license in 1933.

F

  • Rosina Ferrario (1888–1957), first Italian woman to receive a pilot's license, in January 1913
  • Amalia Celia Figueredo (1895–1985), Argentine aviator; first woman in Argentina, and possibly Latin America, to obtain a pilot's license in 1914 with Paul Castaibert
  • Kathleen Fox (born 1951), Canadian flight instructor, air traffic controller and business executive
  • Mathilde Franck (1866–1956), early French aviator; learned to fly in 1910
  • Elisabeth Friske (died 1987), first West German woman to become a commercial airline pilot
  • Wally Funk (born 1939), one of the Mercury 13; first female air safety investigator at the FAA[31]

G

World's first female combat pilot, Sabiha Gökçen.
  • Maggie Gee (1923–2013), American aviator who served in the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) in World War II
  • Julie Ann Gibson (born 1956), Flight Lieutenant Julie Ann Gibson was the first full-time female pilot for the Royal Air Force when she graduated in 1991
  • Betty Gillies (1908–1998), pioneering American aviator; first pilot to qualify for the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron
  • Maya Ghazal, Syrian refugee and pilot
  • Sabiha Gökçen (1913–2001), adopted by Kemal Atatürk; World's first female combat pilot[32]
  • Patricia Graham (1928–2016), Australian aviator, founding member of the Australian Women Pilots' Association in 1950
  • Frances Wilson Grayson (1892-1927), disappeared, presumed dead, while flying from Long Island to Newfoundland, where she and her crew had planned to attempt at a transatlantic flight.
  • Valentina Grizodubova (1909–1993), long distance flyer and wartime hero; the most decorated woman in the Soviet Union[33]
  • Mette Grøtteland (born 1969), first female fighter pilot of The Royal Norwegian Air Force.

H

J

K

L

  • Raymonde de Laroche (1882–1919), first woman in the world to get a pilot's license[39]
  • Constance Leathart (1903–1993), first British woman outside London to get a pilot's license[40]
  • Hazel Ying Lee (1912–1944), Chinese-American pilot who flew for the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II
  • Olga Lisikova (1916–2011), only woman pilot-in-command of a C-47 Skytrain in the Soviet Air Force
  • Lydia Litvyak (1921–1943), fighter ace; first woman to shoot down an aircraft[41]
  • Ila Loetscher (1904–2000), female aviation pioneer and activist on behalf of sea turtles
  • Rose Lok (1912–1978), first female Chinese-American pilot in New England
  • Linda Pauwels (1963–), First Latina Captain and First Latina Check Airman at American Airlines, as well as the youngest woman jet captain (cargo) at age 25

M

  • Elsie MacGill (1905–1980), world's first female aircraft designer, known as "Queen of the Hurricanes"
  • Elsie Mackay (1893-1928), former actress and daughter of Viscount Inchcape, who went missing, presumed dead, during an attempt to fly the Atlantic from England to Long Island.
  • Beryl Markham (1902–1986), first woman to fly west across the Atlantic alone, direct from England to North America[42]
  • Marie Marvingt (1875–1963), first woman to fly from Europe to England across the North Sea by balloon[43]
  • Angela Masson (born 1951), first woman to qualify to fly a jumbo jet[44]
  • Luisa Elena Contreras Mattera (1922–2006), in 1943, first woman to be granted a pilot's license in Venezuela
  • Marie McMillin (1902–1954), American aviator, served in the Women's Army Corps
  • Suzanne Melk (1908–1951), the first known woman in France to fly and the first woman in Europe to receive a pilot's license in 1935
  • Pamela Melroy (born 1961), former NASA astronaut who served as pilot and commander on Space Shuttle missions
  • Betty Miller (1926–2018), first woman to fly solo across the Pacific[45]
  • Violet Milstead (1919–2014), Canadian Air Transport Auxiliary pilot during WWII and the first female bush pilot
  • Karina Miranda, Chilean Air Force combat aviator and the first woman from her country to break the sound barrier
  • Jerrie Mock (1925–2014), first woman to fly solo around the world[46]
  • Matilde Moisant (1878-1964), second American woman to earn her pilot's license, won the Ron-Wadamaker Trophy for breaking the women's world altitude record about a month after qualifying. Gave up flying following a near-fatal crash on April 14, 1912.[47]
  • Jennifer Murray (born 1940), first woman to fly solo around the world in a helicopter[48][49]
  • Siza Mzimela, founder of South African airline

N

O

  • Sicele O'Brien (1887–1931), one of Ireland's pioneering female pilots who raced and set records in Europe and Africa in the 1920s
  • Ruth Law Oliver, (1887–1970), American aviator who looped the loop twice at Daytona Beach in 1915. Went on to be the first woman pilot to wear a military uniform, and the first to deliver air mail to the Philippines[51]
  • Susan Oliver (1932–1990).
  • Phoebe Omlie (1902–1975), first woman to receive an airplane mechanic's license; first licensed woman transport pilot

P

  • Beverly Pakii, first female Papua New Guinean jet captain
  • Suzanne Parish (1922–2010), member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots; co-founder of the Kalamazoo Aviation History Museum
  • Ingrid Pedersen (1933–2012), first woman to fly over the North Pole[52]
  • Thérèse Peltier (1873–1926), French aviator; first woman to pilot a heavier-than-air craft at Turin in 1908

Q

  • Harriet Quimby (1875–1912), first woman to get a U.S. pilot's license and fly across the English Channel[53]

R

  • Carol Rabadi (born 1977), Captain of the first all-female flight crew on Royal Jordanian
  • Bessie Raiche (1875–1932), one of the first women to fly solo in the US (see Blanche Scott)[54]
  • Rosemary Rees (1901–1994), leading British aviator at the Air Transport Auxiliary
  • Molly Reilly (1922–1980), first female Canadian pilot to reach the rank of captain, and the first woman to fly to the Arctic professionally
  • Hanna Reitsch (1912–1979), German glider pilot who established many records and became a test pilot in WWII[55]
  • Ola Mildred Rexroat (1917–2017), only Native American woman to serve in the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs)
  • Helen Richey (1909–1947), first woman to be hired as a pilot by a commercial airline in the United States
  • Mary Riddle (1902–1981), second Native American woman to earn a pilot's license after Bessie Coleman
  • Isabel Rilvas (1935–2025), first Portuguese woman acrobatic pilot, parachutist and balloonist, who inspired the Portuguese Paratroop Nurses
  • Margaret Ringenberg (1921–2008), started as a WASP and then won hundreds of trophies racing[56]
  • Lynn Rippelmeyer, one of the first women to captain a jumbo jet (see Beverly Burns)[14]
  • Ada Rogato (1910–1986), record-breaking Brazilian woman aviator
  • Molly Rose (1920–2016), flew Spitfires for the Air Transport Auxiliary during WWII[57]
  • Gladys Roy (1896-1927), American barnstorming aviator, who made daring stunts such as walking across the wings blindfolded while airborne. Died while posing for photos when she accidentally walked into a spinning propeller.
  • Nadia Russo (1901–1988), pioneering Romanian aviator
  • Zara Rutherford (born 2002), youngest female pilot to fly solo around the world, at age 19
  • Margaret Fane Rutledge (1914–2004), pioneering Canadian pilot

S

Blanche Scott, the "Tomboy of the Air"
Neta Snook, who taught Amelia Earhart how to fly

T

V

W

Y

Z

Organisations

See also

References

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