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Women
in the Golden Age of Aviation
The turn of the twentieth century brought a Golden Age
of Aviation. Caught up in this exciting period were
many pioneering women who defied traditional female
roles to become pilots. Amelia Earhart is the most famous
of this group of aviatrixes, though often overlooked
is Neta Snook, the woman taught Earhart how to fly and
whose adventurous spirit mirrored Earhart's own.
Snook's Early Days in the Sky
Snook had been flying for four years by the time she
met Earhart. After leaving Iowa State College in June
1917, Snook began formal flight training at the Davenport
Aviation School. The school closed after a fatal plane
crash killed the school's president and injured Snook's
instructor. Snook then applied to the Curtiss Flying
School in Newport News, VA. After initially being rejected
because she was a woman, she was eventually able to
attend Curtiss with the financial help of her mother
and some money she had earned on her own. In 1918, the
school was forced to move to Coconut Grove, FL, as a
result of security measures placed on the Newport News
area. Eventually, a government ban on civilian flying
for the duration of World War I would cause the school
to close entirely.
To continue her career in aviation, Snook took a job
as an airplane parts inspector at a British Air Ministry
plant in Elmira, New York. By 1920 she had rebuilt an
old Canuck, a Canadian training plane, at her parents'
home in Iowa and flown her first solo flight. That summer
she began to take passengers for fifteen minute rides
at the rate of fifteen dollars per flight. She also
became a stunt pilot or barnstormer to make extra money.
Passion for Flight: Snook Finds Friendship with
Earhart
After rebuilding the Canuck at her parent's home in
Iowa, Snook moved to California where the weather permitted
her to fly year-round. Bert Kinner, owner of Kinner
Field, hired her to test fly his planes. Snook became
a flight instructor and met Amelia Earhart in December
of 1920. In her autobiography I Taught Amelia to
Fly, Snook describes her first impression of Earhart:
"I'll never forget the day she and her father came
to the field. I liked her on sight [1]." On the
afternoon of January 3, 1921, Earhart took her first
flying lesson from Snook in a Curtiss Jenny plane. Equipped
with an impressive knowledge of aviation and eagerness
to fly, Earhart became Snook's most famous student.
The two became good friends and flew together for over
a year. Snook became close with the entire Earhart family,
often seeking financial advice from Earhart's father
and spending time at the family home.
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| Snook
and Earhart's plane |

Click
to see the blueprint
Earhart was an inquisitive person. Her reading interests
were always varied and she frequently visited the library,
often checking books out for herself, her family, and
Snook. In the featured letter below, dated January 26,
1929, Earhart sends a friendly response to her former
instructor remembering their days of flying together.
She writes; "My dear Neta, it is long ago that
we flew together. Yes, I do remember discussions of
the Koran, and cold boiled potatoes."
In her autobiography, Snook recounts an instance when
Earhart asked her to read a copy of the Koran. Snook
refused, stating that there was no mention of Mohammed
in the Bible and that she believed implicitly in the
Bible with its account of the creation [2]. The subject
was dropped for the time being, but it's likely that
talk of the Koran resurfaced several times after the
incident. Not much is known about Earhart's religious
beliefs, but as an adult she seemed to have an interest
in studying world religions and cultures. She enjoyed
reading the Koran and embraced some of the religion's
overall philosophy as a form of spiritual guidance.
At the time the letter was written, Earhart was aviation
editor at Cosmopolitan and was responsible
for writing about the popularity and trends of aviation.
In addition, she was involved in co-founding the "Ninety
Nines", an organization established to nurture
and support women pilots which is still active today.
Though she was modest about her accomplishments, Earhart
was a celebrated icon of her time. When she returned
from record-breaking flights, parades were thrown in
her honor and large crowds came to greet their "Lady
Lindy". Her career was full of "firsts"
for women, including being the first woman passenger
on a transatlantic flight and the first woman to fly
solo across the Atlantic. She also had the honor of
being the first woman recipient of the flying cross.
Her greatest feat became her last adventure as she set
out to become the first woman and pilot to fly around
the world at the equator for a total distance of 27,000
miles in the summer of 1937. Nearly completing her flight,
Earhart and her navigator Frederick Noonan disappeared
on July 2, 1937 without a trace.
By the time of Earhart's disappearance, Snook had been
retired from aviation for fifteen years. Her marriage
to William Southern and desire for motherhood were the
reasons she gave for leaving the field. She was so adamant
about distancing herself from aviation that upon being
asked to join the Ninety-Nines by Earhart, she declined
in fear that it might ignite aviation interests in her
son. Neta Snook (Southern) didn't fly again until 1977,
when she was invited to pilot a replica of Charles Lindbergh's
Spirit of St. Louis. In 1981, she was the oldest
woman pilot in the United States and continued to be
an active speaker and lecturer until her death in 1991.
Ana Ramirez-Luhrs
Reading Room Librarian
[1] Southern, Neta Snook. I Taught Amelia to Fly.
(New York, 1974), p.101
[2] ibid, p. 105
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[Written on official stationery.]
RAY LONG
EDITOR |
Hearst's International
combined with
Cosmopolitan
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AMELIA
EARHART
AVIATION EDITOR |
INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE
BUILDING
FIFTY-SEVENTH STREET AT EIGHTH AVENUE
NEW YORK CITY
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January
twenty-sixth
1 9
2
9 |
My dear Neta:
It is long ago that we flew together at Kinner Field,
California. Yes, I do remember discussions of the Koran,
and cold boiled potatoes.
Flying has meant much to me, and I am happy in being
associated with aviation in any capacity. Sometime our
paths may cross again, and we may be able to have a
few words about the old days.
Sincerely yours,
Amelia Earhart
Mrs. Neta Snook Southern
427 Shannon Road
Los Gatos, California
ae.na
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Butler, Susan. East to the Dawn: The Life of Amelia
Earhart. Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley, 1997.
Earhart, Amelia. 20 Hrs., 40 Min.: Our Flight in
the Friendship. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic
Society, 2003.
Southern, Neta Snook. I Taught Amelia to Fly.
New York: Vantage Press, 1974.
Amelia Earhart Museum: http://www.ameliaearhartmuseum.org/aviator1.htm
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