Elizabeth Blackwell was born on February 3, 1821, in Bristol, England. And was the third of nine children. Her family moved to the United States when she was 11 years old. They first s settled in Ney York City but later moved to Cincinnati. This where she first became a teacher after her father died just to make end meet. Elizabeth soon realized that teaching would get her no where so she decided that she would become a doctor.…
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…
“We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal. Self-development is a higher duty than self-sacrifice. The best protection any woman can have... is courage.”…
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…
Amelia Earhart is a very known person in the world of woman’s reconization and aviators, but how much do we really know about her? Well, to start with she was born on July 24th, in 1897 in Atchison Kansas. Her father, whose name was Edwin Earhart, was a very wealthy man from being a retired U.S district court judge. But he did have an alcoholic problem and during those times Amelia’s mother would send her and her sister, Muriel, to live with their grandparents for most of the year, except for the summer when Amelia would go and visit her parents. At her grandparents’ house, they had a blast living an “unproper life for young girls” seeking adventures, exploring the neighborhood, climbing trees, hunting for rats, and enjoying breathtaking rides on Amelia's sled.…
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.…
I walked into the schoolroom, and I could see my children sitting in rows based on their grade. I had been asked by the teacher, Miss Ashbury, to come and talk about the remarkable journey that led me to the Narragansett, an Indian territory in the liberating colony of Rhode Island. I sat down in the creaky wooden rocking chair and began my tale:…
At the young age of ten, Amelia Earhart attended the state fair, where she had the chance to gaze upon her first airplane at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines. Without a second thought, she dismissed the aircraft and resumed playing. She is attributed with this verbal reaction after seeing the biplane, "It was a thing of rusty wire and wood and looked not at all interesting," mentioned in Mary Lovell’s The Sound of Flight. It wasn’t until Amelia had attended a stunt flying exhibition nearly a decade later in Long Beach that she would seriously become interested in flight. On December 28, 1920, pilot Frank Hawks gave her a ride that would forever change her life.…
On Friday, May 20, 1927, at 7:52 A.M, Charles A. Lindbergh took off in a silver-winged monoplane and flew from the United States to France. Lindbergh became the first man to fly alone across the Atlantic Ocean; However, Lindbergh showed the least bit of conceit. It was obvious that he was oblivious of his great success and how it would instantly change America forever. Lindbergh flight’s was not only characterized as a symbol of America, it also represented Americans. The graphic details contain the significant meaning of his flight.…
Amelia Earhart, a tomboy in Kansas, growing up was very daring and risky. She enjoyed trying new things and that even resulted to her building a roller coaster in her grandparent’s backyard. In her twenties she fell in love with flight while attending an acrobatic show and her first flight in an airplane encouraged her love among the clouds as well. She knew what she wanted to do and nothing was going to stop her.…
Amelia Earhart, was known as a risk taking, spunky, adventurous, soon to be the first lady flying in air, was born and raised in Aitchison, Kansas in 1897. She was always adventurous in her childhood whether it was riding horses or exploring the outdoors. This made her parents encourage her by taking risks and challenge herself, because they could…
* 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.…
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.…
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.…
Lisa Shaw’s article Amelia Earhart's life and Disappearance, was great, Although, she spent little time informing about her early life. Noting only that Amelia Earhart was born on July 24, 1897. Amelia grew up with her sister grace and a love for adventure. As a child, Amelia explored their neighborhood and even built a roller coaster in her back yard with her uncle. This rollercoaster gave her that first taste of flight.…