Madge Graham was the model for my grandmother.
Poppy, as she was known,
was ahead of her time and a diehard adventurer also.
In 1919, a women's place, according to Madge, was in the cockpit of
an airplane being a navigator for her husband, Stuart Graham, Canada's
first bush pilot.
On her maiden flight a crew of three, Stuart as pilot,
Madge as navigator, and Bill Kahre as mechanic, flew a wooden flying
boat, the Curtiss
HS-2L flying boat, at tree-top level from Dartmouth,
Nova Scotia to GrandMère, Quebec. The aircraft had only very basic
instruments: a compass, an air and wind speed indicator and a turn and
bank indicator. The
noise from the engine made conversation impossible so Madge rigged up a
miniature clothes-line to send messages between herself and the two
cockpits.
The 800 mile trip took five days and nine hours to complete with crowds
greeting them at every stop. But not everyone was impressed.
Admiral Byrd (the first man to fly the Pole) declared, "Flying
seaplanes over land is suicide and taking a woman along is
criminal." (An enlightened bugger wasn't he?)
But Madge Graham was not Canada's only female aviator. The Canadian
Aviation Museum tells us the following:
In 1928 Eileen
Vollick became the first Canadian woman to obtain a private
pilot's license. She was just nineteen when she asked a flying
instructor: "Can a girl learn to fly?" On her first
flight she recalled that she "felt quite at home, fear
never entered my head."
Several women followed Eileen's example. By 1932 over twenty
women from all over Canada had gained their private pilot's
license. This included Louise Jenkins, who bought her own
airplane, a Puss
Moth, and registered it "CF- PEI" in honour of her
adopted province, Prince Edward Island.
Not
all women had this kind of money. When Gertrude
De La Vergne, the first female licensed pilot in Alberta,
applied to fly the mail she was told that a women pilot was
unsuitable. If women were allowed to fly, they were expected to
limit their role to enjoyment. Jobs for Canadian women in
aviation were impossible to find in the 1930s.
Many women took day jobs to finance their passion for flight.
One
exception was Amelia
Earhart, a famous American pilot. Amelia had celebrity
status: girls kept scrapbooks of clippings of her many historic
flights. In 1932 she set off from Harbour Grace, Newfoundland,
to become the first women to make a solo flight across the
Atlantic.
Amelia was the president of the first chapter of the Ninety-Nines,
an all women's pilots' organization. Several Canadian women
tried to join but were
disappointed
to find that the organization was limited to American pilots. In
1936 a group of Vancouver women pilots founded a female flying
club called "
The Flying Seven". This group delighted crowds with
their daring stunts and rallies.
The Flying Seven was active in the late 1930s. When the
Second World War was started in 1939 they went to the local
Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) office to volunteer. But their
services were not required. However much women had proved
themselves as capable pilots, society still believed that a
pilot's job was "inappropriate" for a woman. |
My Grandmother would have been proud of them all. |