- Katherine Stinson
Katherine Stinson (
February 14 ,1891 , inFort Payne, Alabama –July 8 ,1977 , inSanta Fe, New Mexico ). She was the fourth woman in theUnited States to obtain a pilot's certificate, which she earned onJuly 24 ,1912 , at the age of 21. Initially, she planned to get her certificate and earn money she earned fromexhibition flying to pay for hermusic lessons . However, she found she liked flying so much that she gave up her piano career and decided to become an aviatrix. She took her flying lessons from the well-knownaviator Max Lille , who initially refused to teach her because she was female. But she persuaded him to give her a trial lesson and was so good that she flew alone after only four hours of instruction. A year after receiving her certificate, she began exhibition flying. On theexhibition circuit , she was known as the "Flying Schoolgirl."After she received her certificate, Stinson and her family moved to
San Antonio, Texas , an area with an ideal climate for flying. There, she and her sister Marjorie began giving flying instruction at her family'saviation school in Texas. OnJuly 18 ,1915 , Stinson became the first woman to perform a loop, atCicero Field inChicago, Illinois , and went on to perform this feat some 500 times without a single accident. She also was one of the first women authorized to carryairmail for the United States. DuringWorld War I , Stinson flew a Curtiss JN-4D "Jenny" and a Curtiss Stinson-Special (a single seat version of the JN aircraft built to her specifications) for fundraising tours for theAmerican Red Cross . During exhibition flights inCanada , Stinson set a Canadian distance and endurance record, and made the second air mail flight in Canada betweenCalgary andEdmonton , Alberta.Of note is the fact that all of her stunt flying was done in aircraft using the Wright control system which uses two side-mounted levers for pitch and roll, with top mounted controls for throttle and yaw.
The Stinson School closed in 1917, and Katherine became an
ambulance driver for the Red Cross inEurope . There, she contractedinfluenza , which turned intotuberculosis in 1920, causing her retirement from aviation. In 1928, she married airmanMiguel Antonio Otero, Jr. , son of the former territorial governor ofNew Mexico . Although she could no longer fly, she worked as anarchitect for many years inSanta Fe, New Mexico . She died in 1977 at the age of 86.Her flying inspired her brothers to form the
Stinson Aircraft Company .A replica of her 1918 Curtiss Stinson-Special is on display at the
Alberta Aviation Museum inEdmonton .The second oldest
general aviation airport in theUnited States ,Stinson Municipal Airport (KSSF) in San Antonio, Texas, was named in the Stinson family's honor. A middle school in northwestSan Antonio, TX ,Katherine Stinson Middle School , was named in her honor.External links
* [http://www.centennialofflight.gov/essay/Dictionary/K_STINSON/DI158.htm "Katherine Stinson"] , "US Centennial of Flight Commission", retrieved January 6, 2006
* [http://www.ctie.monash.edu/hargrave/stinson_bio.html "The Pioneers"]
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