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Black History Month: Featuring Bessie Coleman

Black History Month:  Featuring Bessie Coleman

Celebrating Black History Month

Bessie Coleman – First African American Female to Earn an International Pilot’s License

Bessie Coleman was an American female aviation pioneer. She was the first African American woman and the first Native American woman to hold an international pilot’s license. 

Celebrating Black History Month 2021 | Airport Assistance Worldwide

Born January 26, 1892, Bessie Coleman was one of 13 children. Her father, of African American and Native American descent, and her African American mother, were sharecroppers. 

Bessie developed fortitude and grit early in life, working in the cotton fields when she was young. When she was six years old, she began attending a segregated school in Waxahachie, Texas, walking four miles each day to get there. Bessie loved to read, and she excelled in her education, earning exceptionally high marks in math.

Each year, Bessie was pulled from her studies and called to the fields for the annual cotton harvest. In 1901, her father left the family in search of better opportunities in Oklahoma. Bessie’s mother and her siblings remained behind.

Cotton Field Ready for Harvest. Stock Image. | guter @ Getty Images

When Bessie was 18, she used her savings from working small jobs and enrolled in the Oklahoma Colored Agricultural and Normal University in Langston, Oklahoma (now Langston University). Her savings ran out after one semester, and she moved back home.

In 1915, Bessie moved to Chicago to live with her brother, John, who had recently returned from WWI. Hardworking and driven, Bessie worked two jobs to support herself. Bessie became enthralled with aviation after reading stories and seeing pictures about the WWI pilots. When her brother teased her for not being able to fly a plane, while women in France could, Bessie took that as a challenge. 

There were no opportunities for women of color to attend flight school in the U.S. at that time. So Bessie saved her money and applied for scholarships to attend flight school in France. The applications needed to be written in French, so Bessie took French language lessons in Chicago before embarking on her journey. 

Stock Image Vintage French Handwriting

In June of 1921, just seven months after arriving in France for her lessons, Bessie Coleman became the first African American female to earn an international pilot’s license from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale.

Bessie returned home to the states with a dream to open a flight school for Black Americans. She performed in exhibitions, performing daring air stunts, and was well known for the “loop-the-loops.” Her risky and dangerous maneuvers earned her the names “Brave Bessie” and “Queen Bess.”  Bessie toured the nation, giving lectures and showing videos of her air tricks to raise money for her flight school ambitions. She was steadfast in her goal to support the African American communities and refused to participate in events that prohibited Black attendees.  

Small propeller biplane performing loop against a blue sky

Propeller Biplane Performing a Loop Against a Blue Sky. Stock Image.

In 1926, Bessie had saved enough money to purchase her first plane, a Jenny – JN-4 with an OX-5 engine. Shortly after, during an exhibition, the motor stalled at 300 feet, and Bessie plunged to the ground. Bessie survived the crash, suffering broken ribs, a broken leg, and facial lacerations, but that didn’t deter Brave Bessie from continuing her daredevil stunts. She spent three months in the hospital and recovered at Mrs. S. E. Jones’s home in Los Angeles before returning to Chicago. Ever the opportunist, she used her downtime to schedule lectures and showed her films to earn money towards her dream of opening a flight school. 

Sadly, Bessie’s dream was never fulfilled. In April of 1926, Bessie tragically died on a test flight with her mechanic and publicity agent, William D. Wills. She was only 34. 


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