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Women ogf the Hall
Jacqueline Cochran
(1906 - 1980)

Quick Facts
Birth:
1906

Death:
1980

Year Inducted:
1993

Achievement In:
Science
 
Jacqueline Cochran's life was about risk and about triumph. A successful businesswoman and director of the Women's Air Force Service Pilots in World War II, at the time of her death Cochran held more speed, altitude and distance records than any other pilot, female or male.

Orphaned early in life and with almost no formal education, Cochran learned to fly at age 22, and it became a lifetime passion. The first woman to win the Bendix Transcontinental Air Race (l938), she established a woman's altitude record (1939) and broke speed records, as well. After the United States entered World War II, she became director of the Women's Air Force Service Pilots, teaching 1,200 women to fly transports and becoming the first woman to pilot a bomber across the North Atlantic. She was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal in 1945, and was commissioned a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve. In 1953, Cochran became the first woman to break the sound barrier and published her book, The Stars at Noon. She became the Chair of the National Aeronautic Commission and was enshrined in the Aviation Hall of Fame in l971, the first living woman so honored.

Additional Resources:
Ayers, Billie Pittman and Beth Dees. Superwoman Jacqueline Cochran: Family Memories about the Famous Pilot, Patriot, Wife and Businesswoman. First Books Library, 2001.

Simmons, Sandra and Nina McGuire. Jaqueline Cochran: America's Fearless Aviator. Tailored Tours Publications, 1977.

Smith, Elizabeth Simpson. Coming Out Right: The Story of Jacqueline Cochran, the first women aviator to break the sound barrier. Walker & Company, 1991.

With Maryann Bucknam Brinley. Jackie Cochran: An Autobiography. Toronto; New York: Bantom Books, 1987.

With Floyd B. Odlum [her husband from 1936, as wingman]. The Stars at Noon. Boston: Little, Brown, 1954.

Papers 1932-1975, 150 ft. Dwight D. Eishenhower Library. Abilene, Kansas.



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