Born: 03/13/1913
Died: 06/04/1993
Inducted: 10/16/1999
A single airplane ride while she was still in high
school in the early 1930s was all it took to hook Ruth Harman on
aviation. She sold her old toys, clothes and even her bicycle to get
the money to purchase a membership in the glider club at the
Kenosha, Wisconsin airport.
In an interview from the September 15, 1931 issue
of Wisconsin News, 18 year old Harman described her love of flying.
"I'm crazy about it," she said. "I've dreamed about
it for three years. Last year I went to night school and took a
course in aviation ... I learned about motors - you should have
seen me then. I came home ... just covered in grease. But I was
happy. I was the only girl in the class and I guess that most of the
fellas thought I was a little crazy, but I knew what I wanted."
After high school she went to work to pay for
flying lessons and earned her pilot's certificate March 16, 1932.
She graduated from an Aeronca C-3 to a Waco F,
mastered aerobatics and as the "Girl Flyer" performed at air shows
throughout the state.
By 1936 she had earned the commercial and flight
instructor certificates. "I wanted to teach others to fly because
I loved it so much myself," she said.
She got her chance to teach others to fly in 1940
when she became chief instructor in the Civilian Pilot Training
program at Kenosha. She went on to train hundreds of Navy flight
cadets during World War II. Harman was one of fifty female CPT
instructors in the country and the only one in Wisconsin. She was
also the first female airport manager in Wisconsin. She remained at
the Kenosha Airport until 1950 when she and her family moved to
California.
At
a time when women were the exception in aviation, Ruth Harman
had an exceptional career.
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