Aviatrix Amy Johnson
British pilot Amy Johnson CBE, born July 1, 1903, was the first woman to fly solo from England to Australia in 1930. She flew in a Gipsy Moth named Jason.
The following are extracts from an Associated Press story released when Amy Johnson went missing in the Thames Estuary, presumed dead, in January 1941.
London - Jan. 6 – Amy Johnson Mollison, Britain’s greatest aviatrix, drowned in the icy waters of the Thames estuary yesterday after she was forced to bail out of the aircraft she was flying for the Air Transport Auxiliary.
Surface craft tried in vain to rescue the war-working ladybird, who had winged, during her spectacular career from Britain to Australia and America, Japan and China and across Africa.
The laughing happy airwoman - “Johnny” as she was known to fellow pilots – gained world-wide attention in 1930 when she set out in a light airplane for Australia from England.
Twenty-two at the time, she had never flown more than 140 miles – the distance from London to her Yorkshire home.
World interest mounted to enthusiasm as she was reported in Vienna, Istanbul, Aleppo and Baghdad on successive days. She reached India in six days, two days under the previous record, but damaged her plane at Rangoon and eventually arrived at Port Darwin, Australia, in twenty days.
Seven months later she tried to reach Peiping via Siberia, but was forced down near Warsaw. In six months she was off again across Russia, Siberia and China to Tokyo. In one day she covered 1650 miles, establishing a new record.
English pride in “Johnny” knew no bounds, and she was made Commander of the Order of the British Empire.
In 1932 she was married to James A. Mollison, himself already a widely known flyer.
A few months after her wedding she broke her husband’s record for a flight to the Cape of Good Hope by 10 hours and 18 minutes. She and her husband planned to fly the Atlantic to New York, rest briefly, span the Atlantic from New York to Baghdad and then fly back to London.
After damaging their plane on the takeoff they tried once more and fifty-seven miles from New York crashed in a forced landing at Stratford. Conn, July 24, 1933. Both she and her husband were injured.
The flying couple’s last attempt at long-flight records was in the Melbourne air race in 1934. Amy and Jimmy started with a brilliant non-stop flight … to Baghdad in just over twelve hours but hard luck plagued them in the form of plane trouble and they withdrew from the competition.
Amy smashed another England-Cape Town record in 1936 when she made the flight in 3 days 6 hours and 26 minutes.
That same year, however, she announced that she and Jim Mollison had decided “soloing” was their best marital course and that they would go their separate ways. Two years later, in 1938, they were divorced.
Amy entered a New York-Paris race in 1937, but the United States Government banned it on the ground that is was a stunt.
Amy then turned to glider piloting, aerobatics and motor racing and became an instructor in the Civil Air Guard. When war came, she became a ferry pilot.
The AP Corporate Archives contributed to this blog.