Nancy Stratford Explained

Nancy Stratford
Birth Name:Nancy Jane Miller
Birth Date:12 June 1919
Birth Place:Los Angeles
Occupation:pilot
Employer:Air Transport Auxiliary

Nancy Jane Miller Livingston Stratford (born June 12, 1919) is an American aviator. She flew warplanes in the civilian Air Transport Auxiliary in Great Britain during World War II and was later a pioneering helicopter pilot in Alaska.

Early life

She was born Nancy Jane Miller in Los Angeles on 12 June 1919.[1] [2] [3] She flew for the first time at sixteen when her brother took her on a sightseeing flight over Los Angeles. She was enchanted with flying and began studying aviation at Oakland Airport in 1939.

Career

In 1942, she joined the civilian Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA), ferrying warplanes around Great Britain to supply the Royal Air Force.[2] She logged around 900 hours of flying and gained experience on about 50 different types of aircraft, claiming that her favorite was the Supermarine Spitfire.[1] [2]

Returning from the war, she had trouble finding employment in the traditionally male-dominated field.[1] In 1947, she found work with a commercial service in Oregon where she flew, taught, and did bookkeeping.[1] The same year she earned seaplane and helicopter certifications, becoming only the fourth woman in the world licensed to fly helicopters.[1]

In 1960, she became the first woman helicopter operator in Alaska when she and her husband, Arlo Livingston, founded Livingston Copters near Juneau.[2] Among her passengers was mountaineer Edmund Hillary, whom she flew to Alaska's Mendenhall Glacier in 1963.[2] The business still operates, as NorthStar Helicopters.[2]

In 1970, she was forced to give up her pilot's license due to deafness.[2]

Later life

In 1978, she and her husband sold their helicopter business and moved to Washington.[2]

After Arlo Livingston died in 1986, Stratford reconnected with a man to whom she'd been engaged during the war, Milton Stratford. The two married in 1992 and moved to San Diego.[2] Milton died in 2008.[1]

In 2013, encouraged by her niece Peg Miller, she published a memoir titled Contact! Britain!: A Woman Ferry Pilot's Story During WWII in England.[1] [3]

Upon the death of Jaye Edwards in August 2022, Stratford became the last surviving Attagirl, as the women pilots of the ATA were known.[4]

Honors

In 2008, she was presented with an Air Transport Auxiliary Veterans Badge by British prime minister Gordon Brown.[2] [5]

In 2015, she was recognized as an Alaskan Aviation Legend by the Alaska Air Carriers Association.[6]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Kragen . Pam . 22 December 2013 . Pioneering aviatrix, 94, relishes memories . 27 August 2022 . San Diego Union-Tribune.
  2. News: Segall . Peter . 9 July 2019 . Juneau's 1st woman helicopter pilot turns 100 . 27 August 2022 . Juneau Empire.
  3. News: Grant . Pat . 1 May 2019 . Nancy Stratford: WWII Pilot . 27 August 2022 . La Costa Glen Resident's Corner.
  4. News: One of the last female pilots of the Second World War has died . Brent . Richter . 24 August 2022 . Pique Newsmagazine . 27 August 2022.
  5. Aviation heroes honoured by Prime Minister . Department for Transport . 9 September 2008 . 27 August 2022.
  6. Web site: Past Alaskan Aviation Legend Honorees . Alaska Air Carriers Association . 27 August 2022.