Some of Nancy’s achievements in life were, when she was 17 she was the first woman to fly a plane, later on that year she got her pilots licence & at 19 she became the first Australia woman to make a living from flying,In 1935 she became the youngest woman in Austraila to gain her commerical flying licence, soon after Nancy became well known with her first ladies fly tour over the country towns of NSW,…
Most people know Charles A. Lindbergh as being the first aviator to fly solo non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean. This historic event for which he earned world-wide acclaim occurred when Charles was a young man after which he continued, throughout his relatively long life, to remain in the public eye and to contribute significantly to our country, to our culture, and to our world. Over the course of this document we will explore the man, his fascinating life, and the many diverse events, some trivial, some humorous, and some quite significant, that will help us to understand him in terms of the events that shaped him and that contributed to the heroic image for which he is recognized throughout the world.…
Amelia Earhart had the courage and independence to do anything she set her mind to. She is well known around the world for her many aeronautical accomplishments. Her bravery and tenacity are legendary. Her attempt to fly around the world is regarded as one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history. Her flight around the world is legendary because of her unexpected and still undetermined disappearance. Amelia broke the stereo type boundaries and let the world know that she wasn’t afraid to be the best female aviator of her time. Her unexpected last flight was her attempt to fly around the world in 1937. Along the journey, Amelia and her partner Fred Noonan made sure to stop to have the Electra checked, refueled, and to tell everyone that they were safe (Candace Fleming 102). On July 2, Amelia and her partner left Lae, New Guinea, and the Electra apparently had 1,000 gallons of fuel. At 8:00 GMT, Amelia made her last radio contact with Lae (Pop Culture Universe). They had short communications with the Itasca, which received the last transmission saying that gas was low. There are many conspiracies to how she disappeared, but the most popular are that she landed on Gardner Island, crashed into the sea, or fell victim to the Japanese during the time of war.…
Amelia Earhart was declared legally dead on January 5, 1939, after the most expensive air and sea search in American history. The first search for Amelia Earhart started on July 2, 1937, and was lead by the U.S Navy and Coast Guard. An additional search funded by George Putnam, Amelia Earhart's husband of six years, was also unsuccessful (“What Happened”). At the time of Amelia’s disappearance, she was one of the world's most famous female aviators. As a result of this fame, expectations were high that Amelia would be rescued. Several weeks of newspapers led the public to believe there was new evidence, later found inconclusive, resulting in disappointment. Many people deduced that Amelia and Fred ran out of fuel a crashed into the Pacific…
Bessie Coleman was the first African American female pilot. Starting off in a racist Texas Bessie worked as a laundress after she dropped out of college. At the age of twenty three she decide to move in in with her brother in Chicago to find a better life. After hearing stories of World War I pilots she had a sudden interest in flying. Due to discrimination Bessie could not go to an aviation school in America, so she moved to France to pursue her dreams. After this she came back to America and became a stunt show pilot. Not only is she a role model for African Americans but also to women.…
* Amelia Bloomer was born in 1818 in Homer, New York. Amelia then got married in 1840. She started her own newspaper called the Lily. She was not a fan of the uncomtorable clothing women were designed to wear, therefore, she decided to go against wearing what women traditionally wore back then and tried designing different and more suitable clothes.…
Did you know that Amelia Earhart inspired Eleanor Roosevelt to apply for a pilot license. Well she also took Eleanor on a trip from D.C. to Baltimore in 1933. As Eleanor Roosevelt once said “Yesterday is history , tomorrow is a mystery and today is a gift , that is why it is called the present.”…
Before she was a pilot she volunteered as a nurse for the Red Cross. During her time as a nurse she worked with wounded pilots and developed a strong admiration for pilots. It was not until after Amelia’s first time in an airplane that she knew she wanted to learn how to fly. In 1921 she bought her first plane second hand and later in October she flew the plane to 14,000 feet, which was the record at the time for female pilots. On May 15, 1923 Amelia was issued her pilots license and became the 16th women to ever obtain their license. On June 1, 1928, Amelia flew from Newfoundland to Wales as a passenger. Pilot Wilmer Stultz flew the plane with co-pilot Louis Gordon. Due to the popularity, Amelia became a star with book deals and product endorsements, she even became an icon for women’s fashion. Amelia’s book 20 Hrs. 40 Min documents her trip across the Atlantic, which was published in1928. Amelia was the first women to fly solo across the Atlantic on May 20,1932. Her plan was to fly from Newfoundland to Paris, but she did not make it and ended up landing in Northern Ireland. In 1931 she broke another world record of flying at 18,415 feet in altitude. Later Amelia became the first president of the Ninety-Nines, an organization for female pilots. On March 17, 1937, Amelia took off on the first leg of her trip around the equator. Months later as Amelia was still flying her way around the equator she reporter her location on July 3,1937, which would later be the last information known before her disappearance. $4 million dollars were spent on a rescue but Amelia was never…
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was both an abolitionist and a women’s right activist, feminist, editor, and writer. Her writing, Declaration of Sentiments, gave a revolutionary call to all women across the country.…
Thesis statement: Amelia Earhart was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic. She showed great determination, courageousness, and accomplishments.…
Amelia Bloomer, originally Amelia Jenks, was born on May 27, 1818, in Homer New York. Amelia Bloomer was a women’s rights activist, fashion designer, journalist, and publisher. She had little education, but still became a teacher for a short amount of time, and a live-in tutor.…
Amelia Earhart did many amazing things before her well- known “around the world” flight. To start off, she graduated from high school in 1915. Shortly after that, Amelia took her first flying lesson on January 3rd, 1921, and six months later she bought her first plane, “The Canary”. She was the first woman to hold a record by rising an altitude of 14,000 feet, and on June 17th, 1928, Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly the Atlantic. She also got…
Second, Amelia was a courageous women and did many things that people thought women couldn’t do. In a world where men could do anything and women didn’t have that opportunity as much as men did, Amelia broke records all over the place. Amelia's biggest flight that made her famous was a very big one. No women had ever accomplished it before. “In Amelia's life she demonstrated that she was capable of doing things that no women would've done. She was brave enough to make the decision to fly the Atlantic Ocean and fly around the world.” (Amelia Earhart the Courageous Women) This quote talks about how brave Amelia was and how it was a big step for women everywhere.…
Ride was one of six women first allowed into the astronaut program at NASA. The reason women were finally let in was because of all of the women’s rights movements. Sally ride was setting a huge example for women everywhere. She showed that women could do anything that men could do, just as good, if not better. She was able to go into outer space and show the world just how much women could do when they put their minds to something and have enough motivation and determination to do it.…
In the early nineteen hundreds the field of aviation was primarily studied by one race and one gender. Only after the nineteen twenties did the world see it’s first African American aviator. She was also a woman and her name was Bessie Coleman. She received her pilot’s license and continued to fly until the tragic day she was thrown from her plane and was killed. Only twenty years after that did World War II come along and the 66th Air Force flying school at the Tuskegee Institute was established. Blacks took advantage of this opportunity to prove their ability and to assist in the war. Benjamin O. Davis for whom my school is named , became the first African American Air Force officer to achieve general’s rank in 1953. Bessie Coleman and B. O. Davis have been a role model for me and I hope that one day I could maybe a role model for other minority female aviators to come. Because of the increase in diversity, Gen. Davis and Bessie Coleman were able to do what they loved and were obviously good at.…