Frankie Housley

Frankie Housley

Infobox Person
name = Frankie Housley


image_size =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1926|10|12
birth_place = Knoxville, Tennessee
death_date = death date and age|1951|1|14|1926|10|12
death_place = Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
death_cause = plane crash
resting_place = Knoxville, Tennessee
residence =
nationality =
known_for = heroism after plane crash
education =
employer = National Airlines
occupation = stewardess

Mary Frances "Frankie" Housley (October 12, 1926January 14, 1951) was the lone stewardess on National Airlines Flight 83, which crashed after landing at Philadelphia International Airport in January, 1951.cite web
author = J.C. (Jim) Tumblin
title = Fountain Citians Who Made A Difference
publisher =
url = http://fountaincitytnhistory.info/People13-Housley.htm
date =
accessdate = 2008-01-24
] She led 10 passengers to safety, then returned to the burning cabin to save an infant. She died in the attempt and was later found holding the four-month-old baby in her arms. The story of her courage made national headlines, including an item in "Time" magazine.cite web
author =
title = "Take Your Time"
publisher = Time
url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,888882,00.html
date = Jan. 22, 1951
accessdate = 2008-01-24
] One passenger called her a "real heroine." A congressman labeled her the bravest American in history.cite web
author = Jack Neely
title = The Bravest Woman in America
publisher = Metro Pulse
url = http://metropulse.com/articles/2008/18_04/secrethistory.html
date =
accessdate = 2008-01-24
]

Early life

Frankie Housley was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, the daughter of John H. Housley and Fannie Mayer Housley. She grew up in Fountain City and attended Central High School, where she was a member of the Bowling Club, Science Club, and Glee Club, and a member of the honor society. She attended the University of Tennessee for one year but left to get married. She was soon divorced, then worked as an office assistant for doctors in Jacksonville, Florida. In 1950, she applied for a job as a stewardess, and was hired the next day.

The crash

At 2:13pm, January 14, 1951, National's Flight 83, a DC-4, landed in Philadelphia from Newark, New Jersey, enroute to Norfolk, Virginia. It skidded off the icy runway, through a fence, and into a ditch. The left wing broke off, rupturing the gasoline tanks, and the plane caught fire. Housley opened the emergency door and saw the ground eight feet below. Returning to the cabin, she helped passengers release their seat belts, guided them to the door and gave a gentle shove to those who were hesitant to jump. After saving 10 passengers, she returned to the cabin to try to rescue a baby. After the fire was extinguished, the bodies of five women and two infants were found. One of the women was Frankie Housley with a four-month old infant in her arms. [ [http://www.metropulse.com/articles/2008/18_13/secrethistory.html Frankie Housley, and some that survived that 1951 plane crash] ]

Aftermath

The "Philadelphia Bulletin" suggested that she be honored with a memorial at the University of Tennessee. National Airlines installed a plaque in her honor in a Miami hospital. Entertainer Eddie Cantor performed a benefit show in Jacksonville to raise money for a new wing of the Hope Haven Hospital for Crippled Children to be named in Housley's honor. The Knoxville chapter of the Shriners dedicated a room in the Crippled Children’s Hospital to Frankie Housley. Fifteen years later, "Reader's Digest" published "A Girl Named Frankie"; its author called her "the Bravest Woman In America."

References


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