Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Norah O'Neill

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Norah O'Neill Flight To Success Norah O39Neill

Norah o neill flying tigress


Born August 23, 1949 in Seattle, Washington, Norah O'Neill learned to fly in 1973 and became the first woman pilot for Alaska Central Air (1974) and the Flying Tiger Line (1976).

Contents

Norah O'Neill Flight To Success Norah O39Neill

During her thirty-five years as an airline pilot, Norah amassed 22,000 hours and was the first woman in the world to pilot the Douglas DC-8 (1977) and to fly passengers on the Boeing 747 (August, 1980).

Norah O'Neill httpsmedialicdncommprmprshrinknp200200p

Piloting large jet transports on trans-pacific routes for Flying Tigers resulted in Norah being photographed and interviewed by Asian publications as the first woman airline pilot to land in Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and Hong Kong.

Norah O'Neill Norah O39Neill the Flying Tigress

Mentoring and encouraging the female aviators who followed her was an important part of Norah's career. She was one of the founders of the International Society of Women Airline Pilots (ISA + 21) in 1978. She served as vice president of that society for two years and as historian for twenty years. She is also a contributing member of the Women in Aviation International (WAI) and The Ninety-Nines: International Organization of Women Pilots. Norah continues to speak at schools and institutions about women pursuing their dream careers.

Norah O'Neill Norah O39Neill Flying Tigress YouTube

Author

Norah's memoir, Flying Tigress (p.2005), gives a candid account of the many challenges she overcame to become a woman 747 pilot in the male dominated commercial pilot profession.

Norah was a contributing writer for Tiger Tales, An Anecdotal History of the Flying Tiger Line (p.2000) and Heart of a Military Woman (p. 2009).

Honoree

Norah has been featured in exhibits about women in aviation at various air and space museums, including the San Diego Aerospace Museum (1994) and the "Chasing Horizons: Women in Aerospace" exhibit at the Museum of Flight at Boeing Field in Seattle (2010).

In 2009, Norah was inducted into the International Forest of Friendship for her outstanding contributions to aviation.

In 2010 she was one of 100 women pioneers honored by the University of Washington Women's Center at the suffrage centennial gala, "Women Unbound".

Artist

Since retirement in 2009, Norah has resided in the Pacific Northwest where she creates wearable art for Tigress One Designs.

References

Norah O'Neill Wikipedia