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Elizabeth Strohfus

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Died
  
6 March 2016, Faribault, Minnesota, United States

Books
  
Love at First Flight: One Woman's Experience As a Wasp in World War Ii...and Fifty Years Later, She's Still Flying

Wwii test pilot elizabeth strohfus one of the few wasps


Elizabeth "Betty" Strohfus (November 19, 1919 – March 6, 2016) was an American aviator and pioneering member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) during World War II. Strohfus, one of just 1,074 female pilots to earn silver wings for the WASPs, flew noncombat missions from 1943 to 1944, often ferrying military planes throughout the United States. She also trained male air and infantry gunners at Las Vegas Army Airfield during the early 1940s. Elizabeth Strohfus was the recipient of two Congressional Gold Medals for her service in the WASPs and was inducted into the Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame. She was believed to be one of the last surviving WASP aviators.

Elizabeth Strohfus Betty Strohfus Visiting Inver Hills Inver Hills News

Strohfus, who was the fifth of her parents' six children, was born on November 19, 1919, in Faribault, Minnesota. Following high school, Strohfus borrowed $100 from a local bank, utilizing her bicycle as collateral, and joined the Sky Club, an all-male aviators club. She worked as a Sky Club volunteer in exchange for a chance to fly. Her first flight was in a Piper Cub.

Elizabeth Strohfus Elizabeth quotLizquot Strohfus WASP PilotCopilot 8th Air Force

The WASPs were disbanded in December 1944. Her application to become a pilot at Northwest Airlines was rejected. Instead, she became a aircraft controller in Wyoming. She then moved back to Faribault, where she married and had children.

Strohfus began speaking about her experience as a member of WASP and a female aviator beginning in the 1980s. In 1991, she became one of the first women to pilot a F-16 when she was 71-years old. Strohfus later flew as a passenger for a 4.5 Gs acrobatic plane ride when she was 95 years old.

Elizabeth Strohfus Elizabeth Strohfus World War IIera pilot dies at 96 The

Strohfus died from complications from a fall at the Milestone Senior Living Center in Faribault, Minnesota, on March 6, 2016, at the age of 96.

Elizabeth Strohfus At 91 This WASP Can Still Sting Growing Bolder
Elizabeth Strohfus The Late Summer Wine Retirement Blog Elizabeth 39Betty Wall39 Strohfus

References

Elizabeth Strohfus Wikipedia