by Carmen Doyle
Margaret Ray was a farm girl from Fort Wayne. She went on
her first airplane flight at age 7, when a barnstormer took her whole family
up. That started her love of flying. She didn’t believe she could be a pilot
because she was a girl, so she decided to become a stewardess.
You can read about Maggie Ray and other Fort Wayne historical figures in books available in our gift shop. |
Maggie got concerned about what would happen if she was on a
plane and the pilot became incapacitated, so she decided that she would like to
learn how to fly a plane just in case that happened. She was working at the canning
factory at GE in order to earn money for the nurses training that all
stewardess were required to have. At age 19, Maggie took her first solo flight
in an airplane, and decided she wasn’t going to be a stewardess- she was going
to be a pilot. There was only one class at Indiana Tech that offered pilot
training. Maggie was the only girl in the class, and the instructor often
picked on her to answer questions, hoping to embarrass Maggie and have her drop
out. Maggie tried to blend in by wearing jodhpurs, but she still got picked on.
In 1943, at age 21, she received a telegram that said “if
interested in women flying training for ferry command” to contact Ethel Sheely,
Chief Recruiting Officer, for interviews. If any women pilots were interested,
they were to go to Chicago for interviews. Maggie went with a couple of other
women, and passed the initial interview. Further instructions were then given
on how to apply for the program.
Maggie received a
letter a few days later from Jacqueline Cochran, who was the Director of
Women’s Flying Training. The letter said that if a woman received “clearance of
your Civil Service appointment and approval of your medical examination, you
will be officially notified when and where to report for duty.” The physical
was the same one that all Army Air Force cadets, who wanted to be fighter
pilots, required. Maggie was concerned she would not pass the physical, because
she was recovering from an appendectomy at the time.
The Women’s Ferrying Squadron had begun in September 1942, and
at first only the most experienced women were accepted- most had over a thousand
hours of flying experience. If commercial airlines had hired women as pilots,
these women would have qualified.
Jackie Cochran urged General H.H. Arnold to provide
opportunity for additional women pilots to be hired. At first Cochran anticipated
being only able to accept women with 300 hours or commercial licenses, but huge
demand meant that requirements were reduced to having a private license.
Women in the program had been instructed “not to publicize
what we were about to do as we didn’t want the enemy to know that United States
was so desperate that it was training women.”
Maggie was sent to training in Sweetwater, Texas. WASP
(Women Air Service Pilots) had the same training as the male cadets, except
females didn’t get gunnery training. Some fundamentals were skipped over
because all the women knew how to fly already. Cochran insisted on military
discipline because she didn’t want anyone to say that the women couldn’t pull
their own weight. However, the women were volunteers, which meant they could
leave at any time. The rate of attrition for the women trainees was 35%, no
higher than that of men. Five hours a day were spent studying math, physics,
meteorology, navigation, aerodynamics, electronics and instruments, as well as
military and civilian air regulations, engine operations and maintenance. Every
minute of free time was spent studying, including with a flashlight under the
covers after bed check. When ground training was completed, Maggie had the
equivalent of a college degree in aeronautics.
Women weren’t supposed to release information about what
they were doing, allegedly in case the information fell into the hands of the
enemy. Maggie had to get permission from the Public Relations Officer for her
name and address to be published in the church bulletin.
Maggie later thought the real reason WASP weren’t supposed
to tell anyone what they were doing might have been because the people in
charge didn’t want a lot of publicity because of the high number of women who
might be likely to “wash out”. Eighty-five girls of the 127 in Class 43 W-5 (Maggie’s
class) graduated. It was dangerous too-38 women pilots died during WASP
training.
WASPs didn’t receive any death benefits (and had to sign a
release discharging the government of any claims, demands or actions on account
of death or injury.) When a WASP died, the rest of the girls had to cover the
expense of shipping the body home. Coffins could not be covered by an American
flag, and family members couldn’t display a gold star in their window (a gold
star indicated the loss of a family member in the war). Despite all the training
that the WASPs went through, they still weren’t considered part of the Army.
There was a perception that WASPs were “rich girls on a
lark”. That wasn’t true. Maggie explained: “I would get orders to pick up an
airplane. I would grab my B-4 bag, which was always packed, and my parachute
bag, catch a train or get on a commercial flight. When I arrived, I would go to
Operations, pick up the airplane and deliver it to its destination. Most of
what I flew were trainers and twin-engine troop transports. When trainers
needed to be moved from base to base for whatever reason, it was a ferry pilot
who did it.”
The WASPs were abruptly disbanded in December of 1944. Maggie
tried to become a flight instructor, but few people seemed to want to take
flight lessons from a girl, so she worked at the local airport at a desk job,
or worked on the sidelines directing and fueling planes while waiting for
pupils. It was when Maggie was at the desk job that she got hired for one last
war effort. In 1945, the newspapers were on strike. A local radio station
called the airport to say that Japan was about to surrender and the station had
an idea to inform people not near their radios: the station would do a news
drop. Thousands of leaflets were printed up with news of the surrender, and the
station wanted someone to drop them over Fort Wayne. Maggie got to be the pilot
to do it.
She recalled in The
Greatest Generation: “I got to fly right over Main Street. Over the
factories. I was flying real low- at only about a hundred feet, almost below
the tops of some of the buildings.” (The History Center has one of the flyers
that she dropped.)
In 1995, on the fiftieth anniversary of V-J Day, a radio
stationed mentioned the dropping of the flyers, and wanted to know if anyone
had any information about the pilot. Maggie called the station and informed
them that SHE had been the pilot. Maggie got to do a re-enactment of the drop-
but this time she stayed out of downtown.
Maggie continued flying, including participating in many
races, as well as continuing to instruct, until her death in 2008 at age 87.
For more information
on Maggie, the History Center has a book: Maggie
Ray World War II Air Force Pilot, written by her daughter, Marsha J.
Wright.
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