Walking on Air (11 page)

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Authors: Janann Sherman

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Calls for stopping the race bounced around in the media following the death of Marvel Crosson. Women should not be allowed to risk their lives, cried the headlines. “Airplane Races Too Hazardous an Adventure for Women Pilots,” said an editorial in
The New York American
;
105
“Women Have Conclusively Proven They Can't Fly”; “Women's Derby Should Be Terminated.”
106
But as Amelia later wrote, “A fatal accident to a woman pilot is not a greater disaster than one to a man of equal worth. Feminine fliers have never subscribed to the super-sentimental valuation placed upon their necks.”
107
A Texas oilman named Halliburton stated categorically that “Women have been dependent on man for guidance for so long that when they are put on their own resources they are handicapped.” Derby manager Frank Copeland responded that “We wish officially to thumb our collective nose at Halliburton. There will be no stopping this race.”
108
The women pressed on to El Paso.

Chubby Keith-Miller ran out of gas and had to set down in the desert. She walked eighteen miles for fuel only to return and find that cactus had ripped her fuselage. Some assistance from a farmer armed with duct tape got her going long enough to get to El Paso.
109
At El Paso, fierce winds and swirling sands made landing treacherous. Phoebe was still leading the CW class with an elapsed time of 8:35:24, and still about two hours behind Louise (6:48:31).
110
Reports of dangerous thunderstorms at Pecos, their next stop, held the women in El Paso overnight.
111
Fatigued from long days of flying, long evenings of festivities, and the endless fixing and patching of their planes, the pilots looked forward to a brief respite at El Paso since it had not been intended to be an overnight stop. Word quickly spread, however, and hundreds rushed to the field. Derby participants spent some three hours signing autographs. The women were “marooned at our crates by mobs who demanded signatures. Books, scrap paper, backs of envelopes, fine writing paper and everything else …. Without doubt, every man, woman, and child in Texas has our autographs,” wrote Louise.
112

The next day dawned bright and clear, perfect weather as they climbed to 6,000 feet to get over the mountains, but the trip to Pecos was yet another test of the women's abilities. The runway at Pecos was a narrow strip hastily cleared out of mesquite and sage brush, lined with automobiles on both sides. To avoid hitting them, Edith Foltz ground looped and Gladys O'Donnell overshot the field, both mishaps causing minor damage to landing gear. But this was a very bad day for Pancho. She had been forced to turn
back to El Paso shortly after takeoff when one cylinder stopped functioning. She was on her way in an hour after the repair of her broken exhaust valve. But coming into land at Pecos, she smashed her plane into an automobile parked too close to the runway. She was unhurt, but both wings had been irreparably damaged. She had to withdraw from the race.
113

Blanche Noyes landed shortly afterward, wobbling down the runway on one wheel. She emerged from the cockpit covered with black soot. She told a harrowing tale of having fought a fire in her baggage compartment. The terrifying smell of smoke forced her to land quickly in the desert, side-slipping her plane to take the airflow away from the direction of the smoke. She could not budge her fire extinguisher from its holder, so she ripped it and part of the wooden flooring out of the plane, severely burning her hand. Then she used sand to put out the rest of the fire. She had lost a wheel taking off from the soft sand. Her burns were treated and her plane repaired in Pecos.
114
Chubby arrived to tell of being caught in a dust-devil, a miniature twister common in the desert. Helplessly, she hung on while her plane flipped several times in the air, losing altitude fast. Deciding against using her parachute, she rode through the ordeal, managing to retake control of her plane a few hundred feet from the ground.
115

The fliers pressed on through three stops in Texas, Midland, Abilene, and then Fort Worth for an overnight stop. Phoebe, with an elapsed time of 13:28:50, and Louise at 11:04:30, maintained their leads in their respective classes. By this time, the pilots were exhausted. Several of them had made multiple unplanned landings, multiple repairs, and this day was one of their longest for having to make up for the unexpected overnight stop in El Paso. Margaret Perry, who had been battling illness for several days, checked herself into the hospital. She told physicians that she barely remembered landing her plane in Fort Worth. They found she had typhoid fever. Perry was out of the race.
116

There was a three-hour stop in Tulsa, then on to Wichita, Kansas, Louise's home, for a tumultuous welcome. The pilots finally left the desert behind, but they danced in between thunderstorms all the way to Kansas. Upon arrival, they dutifully cleaned up and dressed up as best they could for the banquet and festivities, but they could not disguise the white pattern of their goggles across their brown sun- and wind-burned faces. Coming out of Wichita, Gladys O'Donnell upended her plane, damaging the propeller. Her mechanic quickly filed off the tip and she was on her way.
117

From Wichita the fliers turned eastward for their next overnight stop at Parks Airport in East St. Louis. The field was very short with obstructions
at either end. Blanche Noyes landed first but, in her second Women's Derby accident, she damaged a wheel. Neva Paris came in too fast, overshot the field, and cracked her undercarriage. Ruth Nichols also had trouble landing and damaged one wheel. Thea Rasche was still struggling with contaminated fuel; she reported a forced landing between Kansas City and St. Louis to clean a clogged fuel line. Mary Haizlip was also forced down fourteen miles west of St. Louis with a broken gasoline line. And Bobbi Trout, a full day behind because of engine trouble at Pecos, still had not caught up.
118
Louise Thaden maintained her lead with an elapsed time of 16:27:57, although Gladys and Amelia were gaining a bit on her. Phoebe, at 20:23:33, was almost two hours ahead of her nearest CW challenger, Edith Foltz.
119

In Cleveland, the big party had already started without them. On 24 August, the day the derby landed in East St. Louis, the 1929 National Air Races and Aeronautical Exposition opened at Cleveland for a ten-day run. An estimated 300,000 spectators lined the streets for a massive parade: four miles of floats, most of them covered with fresh flowers, depicted the advance of transportation from the horse-drawn skids of native Americans to the chariots of the Persians to the locomotive and automobile and culminating in the airplane. Twenty-one bands and 1,500 marchers accompanied the floats while an armada of military and civilian aircraft, including three blimps, flew overhead. Every evening featured a musical extravaganza with a cast of 120 called “Wings of Love,” capped by night-flying exhibitions and pyrotechnic displays. Over 100,000 spectators paid admission to the first day of the races, the largest gathering in the city's history, overflowing the 30,000-seat capacity grandstands and the 38,000 parking spaces. Roads leading into Cleveland were blocked for hours.
120

The daily flying schedule included “dead-stick” landing contests with pilots coming in with the engine off, glider demonstrations, balloon-bursting contests, lighter-than-air craft, homing pigeon races, endurance contests, aerobatics exhibitions, parachute jumping contests, and military demonstrations. The Navy High Hat precision flying Squadron of nine planes performed intricate aerobatics while roped together with twelve-yard ropes in units of three. They took off together, rolled together, looped together, never losing their formation and never breaking the ropes that connected them.
121

As the women left East St. Louis, there remained only two intermediate stops—Terre Haute and Cincinnati—and one more overnight stop at Columbus. Then a short hop into Cleveland on the final day. Chubby Keith-Miller was forced down near Xenia, Ohio, with engine trouble. She decided
to stay the night with the farm family nearby.
122
Bobbi Trout landed in a farmer's field outside Cincinnati with engine trouble, then further damaged her plane when the fence ripped a large hole in her aileron. She patched it with a piece of tin can and some bailing wire, then limped back into the race.
123
Thea Rasche and Ruth Elder also made emergency dead-stick landings. Rasche discovered her oil case was almost empty; Elder's motor failed on final approach and she skillfully threw her ship into a sharp bank to avoid a smashup.
124
Louise and Phoebe were still leading their respective classes, due largely, it seems, to the fact that they had not had mechanical problems. Louise suspected sabotage at St. Louis: “I was still in the lead which may account for someone filing the breaker points on both magnetos during the night.” Fortunately, her mechanic discovered them before takeoff.
125

The final day of the race, owing to a late takeoff for the short hop into Cleveland, the women were able to rest in the morning. Ruth Nichols, who'd had some work done on her plane, took it up for a shakedown before the race resumed. As she came in for a landing, she failed to see a steamroller parked at the end of the runway and smashed into it head on, somersaulting the plane and landing upside down in the dirt. Nichols crawled out of the wreckage, but her plane was totally destroyed and she was out of the race.
126

As the women took off for the 126 miles to Cleveland, Phoebe was comfortably in the lead in the CW class, and Thaden was an hour ahead of O'Donnell and almost two hours ahead of Earhart. A huge crowd awaited the arrival of the Women's Derby and when Louise Thaden's Travel Air came into view, the crowd went wild. She barely got her prop stopped before the crowd surged around her. A dozen men picked up Thaden and her plane and carried them to a spot in front of the grandstand.
127
Into the microphone thrust in her face, Thaden said, “I'm glad to be here. All the girls flew a splendid race, much better than I. Each one deserves first place, because each one
is
a winner. Mine is a faster ship. Thank you.”
128
Thaden later told reporters that she won only because she had the fastest ship. Since the Women's Derby was a speed race, “the heavyweight rates the honors.”
129

Thirteen women came in behind her. Gladys O'Donnell was the second to arrive, Amelia Earhart third, and Blanche Noyes fourth.
130
Phoebe was the fifth plane to land, hardly noticed in the tumult that gathered around Louise and Amelia. Nonetheless, she had handily won the trophy for the CW class and the $600 prize money.
131
Altogether the women had traveled 2,759 miles, averaging just over 300 miles and two chicken dinners a day.
132

The finish generated considerable excitement, but it was the closed-course races that provided the most thrills for the fans in the stands. These
head-to-head races were ten laps around a five-mile circuit marked by prominent towers called pylons. This kind of flying requires a great deal of skill and control. The contesting planes line up abreast of each other. At the drop of the starter's flag, they all begin their takeoffs simultaneously and head for the first pylon. Any plane passing another must keep at least 150 feet to the right of, or 50 feet above, the plane being overtaken, and must never attempt to pass between that plane and the pylon. The plane being overtaken must hold its altitude and course so as not to interfere with the faster plane. The trick is to fly as fast as one can and as close to the pylons as possible, tipping the plane up on its wingtip at an alarming 40–50 degrees of bank, sweeping around the pylon with just a few feet to spare.
133

The Ladies CW Class Race was the first appearance of women pilots in closed-course racing.
134
Adding to the danger were other events taking place simultaneously. Due to the direction of the wind, the U.S. Navy exhibition team took off directly in front of the stands, sending up a cloud of dust near the home pylon and making the women's race temporarily invisible to the crowd and extremely dangerous for the women making the turn.
135
Despite the difficulties, “Phoebe Omilie
[sic]
in particular seemed to be gifted in her ability to get around the pylon in a matter of a few seconds in her diminutive Warner-powered Monocoupe.”
136
She clocked the race at 112.37 mph, easily defeating her opponents. Chubby Keith-Miller finished at 98.73, Lady Mary Heath 96.17, Blanche Noyes 85.12.
137
Upon landing, Phoebe learned that she was disqualified for missing a pylon. Adding injury to insult, as Phoebe climbed out of
Miss Moline
at the end of the pylon race, she stepped from her plane into a hole in the field and once again broke her ankle.
138
She filed a protest against her disqualification arguing that when she had realized she had flown inside a pylon she had doubled back and circled it, so her win should count. Her claim was substantiated by Chubby Keith-Miller and Lady Heath.
139
The Contest Committee ultimately reversed their decision; Phoebe added $500 and another trophy to her winnings.
140

Best of all, Phoebe took the Aerol Efficiency Trophy. The Cleveland Pneumatic Tool Company, maker of Aerol (air and oil, the first oleo-pneumatic landing-gear shock absorber) struts, donated the perpetual trophy called “Symbol of Flight” and $5,000 prize money to the Women's Derby.
141
Their aim was “to equalize the chances of the small and large planes to win this trophy.”
142
In the contest for efficiency, it was not the fastest, highest-powered plane that won but the pilot who demonstrated ingenuity, navigation, and endurance. The $3,000 solid silver trophy of a woman flier standing atop of a globe was awarded based upon a computed formula: average
mph times 2.5 divided by the cubic-inch piston displacement. This would yield the figure of merit. Phoebe's figure of merit was 289.3; the derby winner, Louise, had a figure of merit of 273.2. Though Phoebe's average speed was 108.19 mph while Louise's was 135.97, when that was divided by the cubic-inch displacement of their respective planes, Phoebe won for efficiency or the best miles per hour per engine size.
143

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